| Faces
of Aging: Life Options
With
more than 1.4 million elderly residents, New Jersey is keeping
pace with the national trend that shows the nation's seniors
are living longer. As New Jersey's older population grows,
the state's senior services are becoming more diverse to reflect
the needs of today's seniors. NJN Public Television and radio
examines the challenges of aging in New Jersey and details
some of the programs and services available in our state in
Faces of Aging: Life Options.
Hosted by NJN News
Senior Anchor, Kent Manahan, Faces of Aging discusses
the programs and services that the Garden State provides for
our state's senior population. The program provides a first-hand
look into the lives of seniors who are at different stages
in life, whether they are looking for recreational and volunteer
activities, living at home with the help of family caregivers
and community-based services, or choosing from a variety of
long-term care options.
Faces of Aging:
Life Options is a one hour lively studio discussion with
field pieces looking at ways to help seniors keep active and
healthy. The seniors are featured in a series of three pre-produced
segments that will be followed by a panel discussion of experts
and policy makers. The segments focus on the programs and
activities available for active, healthy seniors; the in-house
services available for seniors who are able to live at home
through a combination of family care-giving and community
based support services; and some of the long term care options
available within our state's borders.
The panel includes
Commissioner Christine Grant of the New Jersey Department
of Health and Senior Services; Anita Chopra, MD of UMDNJ's
Center for Aging - School of Osteopathic Medicine ; John Wanat,
President, New Jersey Association of Area Agencies on Aging
and Executive Director, Monmouth County Office on Aging ;
Lee Abramson, volunteer Ombudsman, Middlesex County; Jane
Harkey, RN, MSW, president of the Adult Day Services Association
of New Jersey Horizon Adult Medical Day Care, Inc ; Ken Wessel,
Executive Director, Home Care Options, Inc; Dale Ofei-Ayisi,
LCSW, ACSW, Geriatric Evaluation and Management Service (GEMS)
at Kimball Medical Center Alfred C. Gayman, MD a physician
from South Orange, who is a board member of several nursing
homes and whose mother resides in a nursing home; Gary Puma,
president of Presbyterian Homes and Services, Inc.; and William
Isele, State Ombudsman for the Institutionalized Elderly.
Faces of Aging:
Life Options was funded by the New
Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services and produced
by Kate Megargee and Lee Little.
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