Seniors

Community Conversations: JABA’s Tish Blackwell talks about our upcoming Jazz Digs JABA concert

“JABA is such a wonderful organization and making such a big difference in people’s lives.” - NBC29 anchor Kasey Hott, NBC29

Tish Blackwell, our Director of of Philanthropy and Communications, joined Kasey Hott on NBC29 to talk about our upcoming Jazz Digs JABA concert on April 28 at the Paramount Theater, featuring local legend John D'earth directing the UVA Jazz Ensemble, with special guest Damien Groleau, an internationally acclaimed French pianist. Three of the area’s best tenor saxophone players will also be joining D’earth, and more special guests have yet to be announced. And our Mistress of Ceremonies for the night will be Terri Allard.

“We are very, very excited about this. Attendees will be able to enjoy an electrifying evening of jazz,” says Tish. “And all proceeds from this event will go to benefit JABA services and programs. We’ve been around for about 50 years now, helping older adults, caregivers, people with disabilities, and their families, and this will help us continue to be there for people to be able to live better, longer and age in their community.” Watch!

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Virginia House of Delegates to honor JABA CEO Marta Keane

JABA CEO Marta Keane

At an employee and volunteer gathering in early December, JABA Board Chair Dick Gibson presented JABA CEO Marta Keane, on her 10th anniversary as CEO, with a resolution expressing their appreciation for her contributions to JABA.

"Marta possesses the proper balance between passion for mission and sound business practices," the resolution read, "and she has brought incredible energy, compassion, knowledge, innovation, business acumen, team-building, goal-setting, and success to all facets of JABA."

JABA’s Board members aren’t the only ones who have noticed Keane's contributions. Virginia State Delegate Sally Hudson and State Senator Creigh Deeds recently brought forward a Joint House Resolution honoring Keane, which will be presented to her by the Speaker of the House of Delegates in Richmond on Thursday, February 23 at 10 AM.

Sen. Deeds visited JABA right before Christmas and toured their Mary Williams Community Senior Center, Shining Star Preschool, and Respite & Enrichment Center with JABA CEO Marta Keene. Deeds also learned about JABA Insurance Counseling program, which helps people sign up for Medicare and lower the cost of their plans. Center members also peppered the Senator with questions about the need for affordable senior housing and supports that allow seniors to stay in their homes.

“I was visiting with a group of seniors, an 88-year-old woman and a 90-year-old woman, and both kept me sweating with tough questions,” Sen. Deeds said. “ I really enjoyed my visit and learned so much.”

Del. Hudson is also familiar with the work that JABA does in the community and acknowledged the importance of Keane’s leadership.
 
"JABA is a cornerstone institution for our community -- for seniors, caregivers, and their families -- and we all have Marta to thank for leading its indispensable work," said Del. Hudson." Now as president of the Virginia Association of Area Agencies on Aging she's sharing her leadership with peers statewide. It's a joy to join the JABA team in celebrating the 10th year of having Marta at the helm!"

“For the past ten years, Marta has provided exceptional leadership and innovation at the helm of JABA," added Sen. Deeds. "She has navigated some of the most challenging of times with determination and an unwavering commitment to serving the community. I wish to congratulate Marta on her ten years at JABA and thank her for her all of her work on behalf of seniors, adults with disabilities, and their families.”
 
Keane received a B.A. in psychology and sociology from the University of Virginia and a Masters of Education in Speech-Language Pathology from UVA. She also has a postgraduate certificate in Strategic Foresight from the University of Houston. Before joining JABA, she was a vice president of Encore Healthcare and was the president of the Strategies Group LLC.

John D'earth, UVA Jazz Ensemble, headline first Jazz Digs JABA concert

John D’earth talks about the upcoming Jazz Digs JABA concert.

Charlottesville, Virginia - JABA is proud to announce that legendary trumpet player John D'earth, along with the UVA Jazz Ensemble and internationally acclaimed French pianist Damien Groleau, will be headlining our first Jazz Digs JABA concert on April 28, 2023, at Charlottesville's Paramount Theater on the Downtown Mall. Proceeds will go toward JABA programs and services.

John D'earth is long-known for his regular appearances on Thursday nights at Miller's on the Downtown Mall, featuring young musicians or bigger names passing through town, and has always been aware of music's larger impact on the health of the community. D'earth recently became a JABA Board member, and it didn't take long for him to come up with a creative way to show his support.

"JABA is such an effective, powerful organization that helps so many people," says D'earth. "When I discussed fundraising with the Board, I thought, how great would it be to get the UVA Jazz Ensemble at the Paramount to support JABA with special guests."

"We were extremely excited that John agreed to join JABA's Board," says JABA CEO Marta Keene. "Not only does he really understand the importance of our mission to help older adults, caregivers, and families navigate the challenges that come with age -- and how that impacts the community as a whole -- he's generously offered his talents to help make sure we can continue to do that work."

This special concert will include additional special guest performances, including the
 three tenor saxophone players (Charles Owens, J.C. Kuhl, and Colin Killalea), and will be hosted by Mistress of Ceremonies Terri Allard.

The concert takes place Friday, April 28, 2023, at 7 PM. The Paramount Theater, 215 East Main Street, Charlottesville, VA 22902.

Tickets: $35, $50, $125 VIP. Call the Paramount Box Office at 434-979-1333 or purchase online.


VIP TICKETS: A limited number of VIP tickets include a special reception
catered by The C&O Restaurant and a meet and greet with John D'earth. VIP
 tickets are $125, and $50 of the price is tax deductible. Proceeds will go to
 JABA services and programs.

Friends of JABA: George Worthington and Cameron Mowat, Anthology, Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Central Virginia, Atlantic Union Bank



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JABA/UVA "Greenspace Activities for Seniors" Research Project Receives Funding Award

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., March 3, 2021 - The integrated Translational Health Research Institute of Virginia (iTHRIV), a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Clinical and Translational Science Award hub, has awarded $80,000 to two Charlottesville community-focused research projects, one by the Jefferson Area Board for Aging (JABA) aimed at studying the benefits of various nature-based activities for seniors.

“Isolation, any amount of time, can negatively impact emotional, physical and cognitive health," says Marta Keane, CEO of JABA. " And the extreme social isolation created by COVID could exacerbate these risks. That's why it is more important than ever to investigate the impact that purposeful nature experiences could have on seniors’ well-being.”

Keane has partnered with Jenny Roe, PhD, director of the UVA School of Architecture’s Center of Design and Health, and Christopher Neale, PhD, to study whether various nature-based activities can lead to improvements in emotional, physical and cognitive health in seniors.

Early research indicates that there are many benefits to using of outdoor space to increase social interactions in a COVID-safe manner.

“We know that interacting with nature – in gardens, in parks, in wilder settings – builds emotional, cognitive, physical and social wellbeing," says Roe. "At a time when so many older people are suffering from lack of mobility and social isolation, our research will help identify what type of nature intervention works best for health and for whom. That is, comparing a physical approach – walking in nature – versus a cerebral approach – engaging in environmental citizen science – versus a nurturing approach – gardening and growing plants.”

Study participants will engage in activities including walking, planting and various “citizen science” projects. The researchers will then evaluate metrics related to contemplative, physical and cognitive health. Keane hopes that the team’s work will have positive effects not only for JABA-service users but also for seniors nationwide.

Read full UVAHealth news story here.

Adult Day Care - the Affordable Alternative to Assisted Living and In-Home Care

When Lucy Garrison and her sisters suggested to their mother, Katherine Garrison, that she start going to JABA’s Adult Care Center, she — like so many older adults who need assistance — was at first reluctant to leave her home. But they already had been dealing with their mother’s physical problems from a stroke for more than a decade, had their own families and work lives to consider, and had begun to worry about her spending so much time alone in her condition.

“Mom had always been the caretaker and problem-solver in the family,” Lucy Garrison said, “and so it was understandable she didn’t want to go.”

Indeed, for many people like Katherine Garrison, the idea of going to an adult care center seems akin to entering an assisted living facility — something they may not want yet or be emotionally prepared to consider, even though the care they are now requiring at home may be a growing burden on their caregivers. It’s an unfortunate misconception, said Danielle Flippin, manager of JABA’s Adult Care Center in Charlottesville, because time spent at a center like JABA’s actually can help keep people like Katherine Garrison in their homes.

“People often think this is an assisted living facility, and that they are going to have to stay overnight,” Flippin said, “and we always have to reassure them that it’s not. In fact, many people can avoid having to move to an assisted living facility because of us.”

As Flippin points out, specialized care and an array of activities are available for older adults every weekday — even for those with Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia — which can take a considerable burden off caregivers who are working or raising children, and drastically reduce the time spent alone at home.

“And it’s much more affordable than assisted living, or even in-home care,” Flippin said. “And coming here reduces the risk of social isolation.”

What’s more, Flippin says that caring for people during weekday hours only — 6:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday — instead of having to house, feed and care for people 24/7, as assisted living facilities must do, allows the center to focus more on activity programming and personalized care.

It’s also worth noting that JABA’s Adult Care Center accepts Medicaid and veterans benefits and has scholarships and grants available to help people with specialized needs or who those who need financial assistance. In addition, many people might not know that the center is not just for older adults, and that anyone 18 or older with a disability is eligible to become a member.

Still, Flippin acknowledges that it isn’t primarily the misconceptions that prevent people from visiting the center, but rather the reluctance that older adults like Lucy Garrison’s mother have for leaving their homes and their routines, and relying on strangers for assistance.

“We encourage people to start slow, maybe a day or two, then build up,” Flippin said. “To me, it beats sitting at home all day with a caregiver, or on the couch watching TV.”

For Lucy Garrison and her sisters, it involved knowing their mom.

“Mom had always been the caretaker and problem-solver in the family,” Garrison said, “so we got her to go by telling her to think about it as a job, like going to work, and there would be things to do and accomplish. We knew we had to give a her a purpose.”

That was five years ago. Today, at 83, Katherine Garrison sits happily in the main room of JABA’s Adult Care Center in a comfy chair with her feet propped up and a fuzzy blanket across her legs, wearing a pair of bright red Converse high-tops. Her daughter said the family first bought her a pair when she started falling at home, as a younger athlete in the family suggested they would give her better ankle support, but the high-tops obviously became her thing.

“I have blue ones, black ones, green ones and gray ones, too,” Katherine Garrison said, turning slowly toward me with a slightly wry smile, looking at me intently, if not a bit skeptically, with her dark, intelligent eyes.

“I feel safe here,” she said. “It’s important to feel safe, and I like the people, and the music, and the food. I also have a great-niece who goes to the preschool next door.”

There are only two adult care centers in the greater Charlottesville area, both of which are operated by JABA — one located on Hillsdale Drive behind Toys R Us and the other at the Betty Queen Intergenerational Center in Louisa. JABA’s centers have something truly unique — adjoining preschools and programming that allows the children and center members to interact on a regular basis.

For individuals who need a higher level of care typically provided by nursing homes or long-term care institutions, Blue Ridge PACE — of which JABA is a partner — operates a specialized day program on Carlton Avenue that includes extensive medical and therapeutic services.

“The children can get members to do things we can’t get them to do,” Flippin said. “They see those smiling faces and they want to help, want to teach them, so we see them playing games, eating meals together, creating crafts and telling stories.”

While kids are often shy with the older adults at first, it doesn’t take long for them to break out of their shells, Flippin said. And she added that parents report that the kids treat older people differently in public after their experience at the center, smiling and saying hello more often. Of course, for members who’d rather not spend time with children, the center provides other activities when the preschool is visiting.

A look at the Adult Care Center’s daily activity calendar shows how much is going on. Ice cream socials with the preschool, special meals, holiday celebrations, field trips to museums and places like Carter Mountain Orchard, exercise classes, live music and other performances, outside visitors from schools and organizations, gardening, puzzles, games, movies, theme days and even the occasional Elvis impersonator.

“We are pretty entertaining here,” Flippin said with a smile.

“I was skeptical at first,” said Elinor Witcher, 82, a member for two years now who takes a JAUNT bus from her home on Prospect Avenue every weekday, “but then I started participating in all the activities.”

Witcher is fond of balloon ball, a game played with kids from the preschool; she loves all the live music, and playing bingo. “It makes my two daughters feel good that I’m here, and that I’m safe,” she said.

While an adult day care situation may not be right for everyone, and it’s up to families and individuals to make those difficult decisions, there’s a lot to be said for the way these programs help support the whole family.

“We see a lot more three-generation households now,” Flippin said, “and many caregivers who are still working and raising children. We’re here to let them know that you are not alone, and that we can help relieve the burden of caregiving.”

“Once we got her there, the socialization was very important, and it revived her, brought new life to her,” Lucy Garrison said of her mother. “The center has helped us in so many ways, giving her the personal interaction she needed, allowing us to keep her at home. … We can go to work … and we’re comfortable knowing she’s in a safe, loving environment. It’s a truly amazing program.”

This article originally appeared in the Daily Progress