Green House Project Enters Global Small-Home Eldercare Alliance
Household Model International Consortium to promote, expand alternatives to institutions
Leading eldercare providers from three continents with experience and passion for small domestic household models of residential care are joining together to advocate for their wider adoption.
Australia’s HammondCare, the U.K.’s Belong, and The Green House Project in the U.S. have joined together as founding members of the Household Model International Consortium to utilize their shared experience, skills, data and voice to promote the quality-of-life benefits of small household living.
Representatives from the three organizations today signed a Memorandum of Understanding to form the consortium at the Australian High Commission, London.
An objective arising from the MOU will be a shared research agenda, including utilizing each other’s respective relationships with universities to deepen knowledge on the household model and how it can be further developed and enhanced.
HammondCare CEO Mike Baird said his organization, one of Australia’s leading health and aged care providers, had more than 25 years of experience with the cottage model, a form of small household model, to support people living with dementia.
The recent Royal Commission into Aged Care, Quality, and Safety, a blueprint for reform of the Australian aged care sector, recommended a shift toward small household or small-scale congregate living.
“Our experience is that the small household form of residential care provides reductions in hospital admissions, lower use of medications, and a higher quality of life for the residents,” Baird said.
Belong Villages, which operates eight care communities for older people, was one of the early pioneers of the household model for people living with dementia in the U.K.
CEO Martin Rix explained that in-depth research combined with the organization’s early pilots with different sized households had enabled it to evaluate alternative approaches and it was this experience that led to household living becoming the blueprint for the new Belong villages that they now run.
“Our experience has really challenged traditional thinking around what is possible to achieve in terms of outcomes and quality of life for older people,” Rix said.
“The feedback from the health care professionals we link with, as well as from families, is overwhelmingly positive, with the smaller household setting really proving conducive to the formation of strong relationships between both residents themselves and, in addition, residents and members of the care team,” he said. “This familiarity, in turn, provides a sense of security and wellbeing that enables residents to make the most of the wider creative, physical and social opportunities on offer in our care villages.”
Susan Ryan, CEO of the Center for Innovation, the non-profit parent of The Green House Project, said the organization had strong data from establishing nearly 400 homes that are small in scale, self-contained, and self-sufficient in 32 U.S. states.
“The COVID-19 pandemic showed the clear advantages of small-home alternatives to traditional eldercare settings, as well as the power of international collaboration,” Ryan said. “I’m delighted to join with our partners in eldercare transformation from around the world to share what we’ve learned and build the next generation of services and supports for elders everywhere.”
As well as research, the consortium will establish areas of strategic focus, joint papers, and position statements. There will also be opportunities for staff exchanges and enhanced learning, as well as shared learning materials and packages.
Media Contacts
The Green House Project
Alex Spanko
516-587-2097
aspanko@thegreenhouseproject.org
HammondCare
Kelvin Bissett
+61 418 222 107
kbissett@hammond.com.au
Belong Ltd.
Maha Hamer
07890 415580
maha.hamer@belong.org.UK