http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110107/ap_on_re_us/us_nursing_homes_young

Picture of the quad is in link above.  The article says:
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*More young people are winding up in nursing homes*


 By MATT SEDENSKY, Associated Press Matt Sedensky, Associated Press
12 mins ago


SARASOTA, Fla. – Adam Martin doesn't fit in here. No one else in this
nursing home wears Air Jordans. No one else has stacks of music videos by
2Pac and Jay-Z. No one else is just 26.

It's no longer unusual to find a nursing home resident who is decades
younger than his neighbor: About one in seven people now living in such
facilities in the U.S. is under 65. But the growing phenomenon presents a
host of challenges for nursing homes, while patients like Martin face
staggering isolation.

"It's just a depressing place to live," Martin says. "I'm stuck here. You
don't have no privacy at all. People die around you all the time. It starts
to really get depressing because all you're seeing is negative, negative,
negative."

The number of under-65 nursing home residents has risen about 22 percent in
the past eight years to about 203,000, according to an analysis of
statistics from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. That number
has climbed as mental health facilities close and medical advances keep
people alive after they've suffered traumatic injuries. Still, the overall
percentage of nursing home residents 30 and younger is less than 1 percent.

Martin was left a quadriplegic when he was accidentally shot in the neck
last year by his stepbrother. He spent weeks hospitalized before being
released to a different nursing home and eventually ended up in his current
residence, the Sarasota Health and Rehabilitation Center. There are other
residents who are well short of retirement age, but he is the youngest.

The yellow calendar on the wall of Martin's small end-of-the-hall room
advertises activities such as arts and crafts. In the small common room down
the hall, a worker draws a bingo ball and intones, "I-16. I-one-six." As
Martin maneuvers his motorized wheelchair through the hallway, most of those
he passes have white hair and wrinkled skin.

"It's lonely here," Martin says, as a single tear drips from his right eye.

Martin exchanges muted hellos with older residents as he travels down the
hall to smoke outside. His entire daily routine, from showering to eating to
enjoying a cigarette, is dictated by the schedules of those on whom he
relies for help.

He usually wakes up late, then waits for an aide to shower him, dress him
and return him to his wheelchair. He watches TV, goes to therapy five days a
week and waits most days for his friend to bring him meals.

He mostly keeps to himself, engaging in infrequent and superficial
conversations with his elders.

Martin's parents are unable to care for him at home. His father is a truck
driver who is constantly on the road, and his stepmother is sick with lupus.
Medicaid pays his bills; it could take a lawsuit for him to get care outside
a nursing home.

Advocates who help young patients find alternatives to nursing homes say
people are often surprised to learn there are so many in the facilities.
About 15 percent of nursing home residents are under 65.

"When I tell people I try to get kids out of nursing homes, they have no
idea," says Katie Chandler, a social worker for the nonprofit Georgia
Advocacy Office.

Federal law requires states to provide alternatives to institutional care
when possible, though its implementation varies from place to place.
Navigating the system can require a knowledgeable advocate and, sometimes,
litigation.

Not all younger nursing home residents are there for good. Some nursing
homes are seeing an increase in patients who come to recover there instead
of in a hospital, because it is cheaper for their insurance company.

Like Martin, many younger residents have suffered a traumatic injury. Others
have neuromuscular diseases such as multiple sclerosis, or have suffered a
stroke.

Brent Kaderli, 26, of Baytown, Texas, became a quadriplegic after a car
accident in 2006. He hopes rehabilitation will help him gain enough strength
to move into an assisted living facility and eventually, to an apartment
with his girlfriend.

He shares his nursing home room with an older man who suffers from dementia.
It is not ideal, but because his parents' home is not modified to
accommodate his wheelchair, he thinks it's the only option right now.

"Just knowing that one day I will be better, I'm still hoping and praying
for that. In the meantime, I think about my family and my friends, what I
used to be able to do, and I stay sad a lot," he says. "This is probably the
best that I could have at this point."

The same generational tensions that exist outside nursing homes are inside
them as well, and are sometimes exacerbated by the often close confines.

Older residents complain about loud music and visitors, younger residents
complain about living with someone with dementia or being served creamed
spinach. Many nursing homes try to house younger residents together, though
in many cases their small numbers make that difficult.

For young people who find themselves newly disabled, the psychological and
social needs are often even more challenging than their physical demands.
That presents a challenge for nursing homes that are used to serving people
near the ends of their lives.

At Bayshore Health Center in Duluth, Minn., 34 of the 160 residents are
younger people, all living in private rooms in their own wing. The staff has
found that subtle changes can improve their lives.

Instead of bingo night, there are poker games and outings to nightclubs. For
someone who stays up late watching a movie, breakfast can be served at 10
a.m., rather than 7 a.m. Pizza is offered in place of lasagna; Mountain Dew
and Coke are poured instead of coffee and tea.

Still, many younger residents sink into depression because of their physical
limitations, their loneliness and their nursing home surroundings.

"For them it's a life sentence. When you're 40 years old you know you're
never getting out. This is the way your life will be forever and ever.
Amen," says Diane Persson, a gerontologist who has written about the boom in
younger nursing home residents.

Martin fears that may be true for him. He used to look forward to joining
the Army and earning a college degree in science or engineering. Now he
simply looks forward to visits from his friend Paul Tuttle, who on this day
brings him nachos he feeds him along with sips of water.

"If I'm not here, he's got no one his age to talk to about football or
anything," Tuttle says, wiping Martin's face.

Propped in his wheelchair, Martin says: "It makes you feel old. If that's
all you're around, that's what you become."

(This version corrects Katie Chandler's affiliation to Georgia Advocacy
Office, not state of Georgia.)
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