Isabella Geriatric Center

Isabella 515 Audubon Avenue campus

Isabella Geriatric Center is a non-profit, non-sectarian organization that has provided residential and community-based services for elderly residents of New York City since 1875. The main campus is located in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan at 515 Audubon Avenue at the corner of 190th Street.

History

Isabella Uhl 1846 - 1873

When Anna and Oswald Ottendorfer opened the first home in 1875, they named it in honor of Anna's daughter, Isabella Uhl, whose early death at the age of 27 cut short her career in caring for the poor. Isabella had been impressed by the precarious position of aged women without home or family. When confined to bed, Isabella expressed to her mother the wish that she establish an institution to ensure these women refuge and protection. Two years after Isabella's death, Anna Ottendorfer opened Isabella Heimath in Astoria, Queens. The home was originally dedicated to the care of indigent elderly women, per Isabella Uhl's wishes. Isabella Home moved to its present location in 1889 and simultaneously expanded its mission to care for both women and men, without regard to race, creed or nationality.[1][2]

In 1899, the United States Commission to the Paris exposition of 1900 requested that Isabella Heimath provide photographs for an exhibition on American Charities.[3] For this submission, the home was awarded the Silver Medal for excellence of its building, services and purposes.

After 76 years Isabella outgrew its capacity of 132 residents and the Board of Managers moved to make provisions for more space and expanded services. On December 7, 1965, Nelson A. Rockefeller, then Governor of New York State, dedicated Isabella House, a 17-story building containing 12 floors of furnished apartments, three floors of nursing care and two floors for services and public spaces.[4]

The House provided independent living for approximately 250 aged residents. This affordable housing residence for the well elderly was a new concept in institutional care for the aged. At the time, it was the first housing program for the elderly which offered medical and nursing care and a package of social services in a setting where personal freedom and independence was assured.

The growth from 132 to approximately 500 residents made it apparent that the original Isabella Home needed to be replaced. Consequently on April 3, 1972, the 14-story Isabella Nursing Home building was opened. The combination of facility and program expansion in the next few decades helped to create the present day Isabella Geriatric Center. The 1990s once again called for changes and new goals; Isabella began a move to create a more home-like ambiance for residents.

Current work

Today, Isabella is a large complex offering a diversity of services. In addition to a 705-bed nursing home, Isabella offers independent senior housing, adult day health care, child day care, home care, short- and long-term rehabilitation and a variety of community programs designed to help older adults remain healthy while living at home.

Other community-based programs include:

Person centered care model

The Isabella Geriatric Center and Cobble Hill Health Center have been engaged in an ongoing collaboration to explore new ways to enhance person centered care and to construct a model that uses performance improvement approaches to guide staff in addressing t he needs and preferences of residents.[7][8][9]

They have published a manual on culture change and person-centered care for nursing home staffs, "Getting Better All the Time", which provides practical guidance.[10]

Nursing home certifications

Isabella is a Medicare and Medicaid Certified Nursing Home.[11]

Facility locations

Dedication of Isabella House 1965

Affiliations

Isabella is a member of the following organizations:

See also

References

Notes

  1. "Die Isabella Heimath". The New York Times. March 10, 1895. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  2. Renner, J. "Isabella Geriatric Center". Washington Heights & Inwood Online.
  3. "Great Triumph for America". The New York Times. 2 September 1900. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  4. Isabella Geriatric Center 100th Anniversary Commemorative Book. Isabella Geriatric Center (New York, NY). 1975.
  5. Hoffman, Jan (18 December 2007). "Doggedly Persistent, Untying Medicare Knots for the Elderly". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  6. "Community Empowerment Grants Announced". New York State Office for the Aging. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  7. "Isabella Geriatric Center". Isabella Geriatric Center. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  8. "Cobble Hill Health Center". Cobble Hill Health Center. Retrieved July 21, 2011.
  9. "Creating Homes and Building Communities". Ideas Institute.
  10. ""Getting Better All The Time" A Guide for Nursing Home Staff". Isabella Geriatric Center and Cobble Hill Health Center. Retrieved 10/4/11. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  11. "Facility Characteristics: Isabella Geriatric Center Inc". New York State Department of Health. 4 April 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2012.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Isabella Geriatric Center.