Fifteen Community Colleges Win Awards for Innovative Caregiving Training Programs
August 13 2009 - 7:05AM
PR Newswire (US)
NEW YORK, Aug. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- The International Longevity
Center, with support from MetLife Foundation, has selected 15
community colleges to receive $20,000 grants for caregiver training
programs. The 2009 Community College Training Initiative grants are
part of the Caregiving Project for Older Americans, a partnership
of the International Longevity Center and the Schmieding Center for
Senior Health and Education. The initiative is focused on
addressing a growing caregiving crisis by encouraging the expansion
of caregiver training programs for family caregivers and in-home
care workers. Since 2007, the initiative has awarded 39 grants.
"This initiative has gained tremendous momentum in recent years and
this year's applications were particularly strong," said Dr. Robert
N. Butler, president and CEO of the International Longevity Center.
"More than ever, people who need quality homecare are having
difficulty finding it, and families who often provide care are
facing greater challenges balancing work and home
responsibilities." This year's winners are: -- Aiken Technical
College (Aiken, South Carolina), to expand its caregiver program to
an offsite location in Aiken County, which will assist in-home care
agencies to provide quality care for clients and provide a career
pathway for in-home caregivers. -- Cabrillo College (Aptos,
California), to launch a training program that targets direct care
workers and family caregivers. The program will offer a combination
of lecture, discussion, and experiential learning techniques in
Spanish and English. -- Clark College (Vancouver, Washington), to
create home-based caregiver training through E-learning modules.
The modules will provide high definition videos illustrating the
proper techniques for home healthcare. -- Community College of
Allegheny County (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), to develop a training
program that incorporates multicultural standards into a personal
assistant training program for paid and family caregivers. --
Eastern Shore Community College (Melfa, Virginia), to establish a
network of quality paraprofessionals in eldercare, using a
"train-the-trainer" model to individuals or groups who either live
with or help provide care to older family members. -- Feather River
Community College (Quincy, California), to develop a training
program to help care for home-bound people with a chronic illness
or a disability. Students will be family caregivers or paid care
workers employed by Plumas County. -- George C. Wallace Community
College (Dothan, Alabama), to produce training videos for test
preparation, through collaboration with a local healthcare service
provider, for those pursuing careers in nursing, long-term care and
home health. -- Kingsborough Community College (Brooklyn, New
York), to introduce a program of "shared training" designed to
create a collaborative relationship between family caregivers and
home health care workers. -- Macomb Community College (Warren,
Michigan), to expand its Eldercare Specialist Program beyond the
campus, allowing family caregivers to attend on-campus, hands-on
caregiver training in a Certified Nursing Assistant lab. -- Miami
Dade College (Miami, Florida), to establish an Elder Caregiver
Educational Institute to provide training in multiple languages,
career services, and a networking resource fair. The curriculum
will include content on cultural sensitivity. -- Monroe Community
College (Rochester, New York), for a collaborative effort with two
other community colleges that provides skill training to in-home
care workers and family caregivers, including a module featured in
courses offered by Finger Lakes Community College and Lifespan, an
elder services organization. -- Parkland Community College
(Champaign, Illinois), to provide home health aide certification
training to nursing assistants, development workshops for home
health care employees, and self-management training for individuals
and family caregivers. -- Prairie State College (Chicago Heights,
Illinois), to provide training to family caregivers and residents
seeking caregiving opportunities, in an area where unemployment
rates have been above the national average for years. -- Southeast
Arkansas College (Pine Bluff, Arkansas), to provide classes to
train both family caregivers and in-home care workers, offering
career opportunities to both the unemployed as well as seniors
looking to supplement their retirement income. -- Trinity Valley
Community College (Athens, Texas), to offer a new training program
that provides entry-level access to medical training, which can
serve as a "bridge" to other medical training pathways. "Community
colleges are perfectly positioned to help address a growing
caregiving crisis," said Dennis White, president and CEO of MetLife
Foundation. "MetLife Foundation is pleased to support this
initiative, which offers much-needed training resources to family
caregivers and in-home care professionals." The International
Longevity Center-USA is a not-for-profit, nonpartisan research,
education, and policy organization whose mission is to help
individuals and societies address longevity and population aging in
positive and productive ways, and to highlight older peoples'
productivity and contributions to their families and society as a
whole. The organization is part of a multinational research and
education consortium, with centers in 11 countries, which work both
autonomously and collaboratively to study how greater life
expectancy and increased proportions of older people impact nations
around the world. For more information, visit
http://www.ilcusa.org/prj/caregiving.htm. MetLife Foundation was
established in 1976 by MetLife to carry on its longstanding
tradition of corporate contributions and community involvement. In
the area of aging, the Foundation funds programs that promote
healthy aging and address issues of care giving, intergenerational
activities, mental fitness, and volunteerism. More information
about MetLife Foundation is available at http://www.metlife.org/.
Contacts: Ted Mitchell (401)827-3236 DATASOURCE: MetLife Foundation
CONTACT: Ted Mitchell of MetLife, +1-401-827-3236, Web Site:
http://www.metlife.org/
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