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“I have one

of those

blessing jobs.”

That’s Kay Hudelson talking. She’s

the program director for Dignity

Health’s Golden Umbrella Adult

Day Program and Adult Day Health

Care. And she absolutely loves

her job.

The Adult Day Program serves

up meals, activities, and daytime

care for people with Alzheimer’s

disease and other conditions. Adult

Day Health Care provides medical

treatment, like nursing care, family

support, and speech and physi-

cal therapy.

More than 400 people have

taken part in the two programs

since 2008. Their average age: 82.

“Our whole goal is to help seniors

live as independently as possible

for as long as possible,” says

Hudelson. “We pick them up at

their homes and keep them active

in as many ways as we can.”

At the Adult Day Program, that

includes playing bingo and other

games, gardening, and doing crafts.

There’s a beauty shop on-site as

well. And both programs provide

healthy meals.

Maybe the best description of what

these programs do came from

a nurse who noticed a

Under the Golden Umbrella

Golden Umbrella is a social service agency that reaches out to seniors

and adults with disabilities.

Some of its programs and services are designed to help people

stay at home and avoid going into a skilled nursing facility. Other

programs give seniors the opportunity to share their knowledge and

experience with people in need.

Golden Umbrella can help low-income seniors pay their power

bills. It can provide a friendly voice on the other end of a daily

phone call. And it can offer families the reassurance they need

that, while they’re out taking care of life’s duties, their loved one

is being cared for with compassion and skill.

Call 530.226.3004 to learn more about

enrolling in the Adult Day Program or Adult Day

Health Care.

The good life

Adult Day Program gives seniors a helping hand to live their best

former patient of hers taking part in

the Adult Day Program. The patient

used to need extensive care at

home. Now the woman was feeding

herself again with special utensils

provided by the program. She

was playing bingo using an easel

adapted for her eyesight.

“I finally realize what you do here,”

the nurse told Hudelson. “You give

them back their lives.”

SENIOR CARE

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