SERV Behavioral Health At SERV we share our experience, support and guidance with children,  adults and families as they work to recover from and cope with mental  illness, addictions, challenging behaviors, and developmental  disabilities

 


     

Family Care Provider opens her home
to recovering women


  “Eighteen years have come and gone
 since mama passed away…But,now I’m  with Ms. Hadley. What a wonderful lady  – no more rags, (I have) nice suits,  dresses and pants. I get to travel and  have cookouts and go to church with  her.  She cooks, I clean, but get  compensated for it. No more depression  or laziness.”

 -- Excerpt from “The Hadley Residence,”  a composition from “Reflections” by  ElsieW., a consumer with SERV Centers   Hudson County  Pearl Hadley, center, a family care provider with SERV Centers of                                                                                                   New Jersey  Hudson County, is flanked by two of the SERV                                                                                                   consumers who live in  home in Jersey City – Elsie, left, and Rosa.
 By Ida Furente Doolan        
 Director of Communications

   In her tidy home on a one-way street in Jersey City, Pearl Hadley  provides the kind of nurturing home that makes it simple to see why  one of the three SERV consumers for whom Miss Hadley cares  summons up a motherly image of her in her “Reflections” booklet  about recovery. 

   Miss Hadley, as she is called by the women who live in her home,  is a family care provider in SERV Centers-Hudson County’s  Therapeutic Foster Care program, a role she feels blessed to have  found since she retired from her job as an assistant treasurer in a  bank in Jersey City.  As a family care provider for SERV, Miss Hadley  is required to not only provide training, personal guidance, food and  shelter to the women in her care, but also comfort, warmth and  acceptance.

   That she embraces the residents into her own family by including  them in her personal vacations and family gatherings is a bonus that  is appreciated by Elsie, Rosa and Dinorah, all of whom are near the  age of 60.

   “They are so very blessed to be with her,” says Renita Farkas,  Nursing Services Coordinator for SERV-Hudson County.   “Miss Hadley  made them more aware and responsible for their hygiene and  grooming and nutrition and all aspects of wellness and recovery,”  says Ms. Farkas.  “She taught them proper etiquette, table manners,  and the proper way to dress.” Miss Hadley also has instructed the  women about proper nutrition and how to maintain a low-calorie,  low-fat, low-salt and more-fiber food plan.

   According to Ms. Farkas, who performs 90-day reassessment visits  to the home, these residents with mental illness in the TFC program  function at a higher level.  They are able to travel independently  using public transportation, shop for food, cook, and are  knowledgeable about their medications.

   Miss Hadley, a divorced mother of two grown children, has been a  family care provider for SERV since April 2005.  After learning of the  program through another SERV provider, she filled out an application  and then interviewed in her home with SERV Centers Hudson County  Director Patty Duerr.  Miss Hadley was approved as a family care  provider after she passed the background check, her home met all  safety requirements by SERV, and she attended first aid and other  training by SERV staff. 

   To determine whether a provider and a consumer are a match, SERV  first coordinates a dinner visit with the consumer in the provider’s  home, and if they seem compatible, then an overnight stay is  arranged.  When all parties are in agreement to the match-up, then  the consumer can move in to the home. Providers are compensated  for their services by SERV and they receive a service fee from the  consumer, as well.

   Elsie was the first resident to become a part of Miss Hadley’s home  in April 2005.  After some time, Miss Hadley thought Elsie seemed  lonely so she called SERV to ask for another resident who might be a  good match with Elsie.  In April 2006, Rosa joined the “family.”    Unbeknownst to staff who arranged it, the women happened to know  each other from the ‘70s and were thrilled to meet again.  Both  women have similar challenges – undifferentiated schizophrenia with  mild mental retardation.   Another resident, Dinorah, joined the  group in August 2008.

   How Miss Hadley made the transition from her job at the bank to  one of caregiver was through divine instruction, she says. “God gave  me what I needed (to do it).  I treat them like family … and my  family treats them the same way.”  Miss Hadley routinely takes the  residents on trips to the Jersey shore and to family gatherings in  Connecticut and North and South Carolina.  “I want them to  experience things,” she says.

   The trips wouldn’t be possible if Miss Hadley hadn’t first shown the  women how to budget their money.  Together they determine the  cost of transportation and hotel stays and how much a month they  need to save in the bank to make it happen.

   Miss Hadley says the structure, scheduling and organizational skills  she learned while working in the bank are what prepared her for this  part of her provider role.  She maintains records and a doctor’s  appointment log book on each of the women, though the residents  themselves schedule and keep their appointments independently in  most cases.

   On her own, Miss Hadley also holds monthly meetings with the  women to discuss their goals and records them in a book. She has  the residents “sign-off” on their new goal, such as organizing a  closet, not eating in the bedrooms, washing hands before eating,  and more.  She will refer back to the book for the “promise” if a goal  has not been accomplished, and they discuss ways to bring it to  fruition.  “I tell them, if you have anything that is bothering you,  come to me. You are not bothering me,” says Miss Hadley.

   Miss Hadley’s friend of 40 years, Carolyn, fills in the gaps as a  trainee when Miss Hadley leaves the house for her part-time clerical  job four days a week at Ministries Alliance in Jersey City.  Carolyn,  who cooks dinner for the household, lives on the second floor and  the three residents occupy their own bedrooms on the first floor.  Miss Hadley lives in a finished apartment in the house.

   All of the women have a very good relationship with one another,  says Miss Hadley.  There are some challenges and  misunderstandings at times, she says, but “they know there are  boundaries.  I respect them and they respect me.”

   “When I came to Miss Hadley’s home, I found relief,” says Rosa.  “Miss Hadley helps me with budgeting my money and teaches me  how to stretch it.” Currently she is saving the money she earns from  her part-time production work three days a week at the occupational  center of Hudson Community Enterprise to buy partial dentures.   “Miss Hadley is a great provider – the best I ever heard of.  She  takes us to family reunions … birthday parties and to her godchild’s  pajama party.  This is like my own family. I don’t feel strange  (here).”

   With the help of Miss Hadley, Rosa has made a significant change  in her health by reducing the number of cigarettes she smokes,  which she does outside the house.  Rosa explained that she started  smoking in her 40s, when she was a patient at Trenton Psychiatric  Hospital.  Twenty years later, after taking a pledge in the  smoking- cessation workshop at last year’s SERV Recovery NJ  Conference, Rosa agreed to let Miss Hadley monitor her cigarette  intake.  She has decreased from one pack a day to five cigarettes a  day. Her cough has lessened and her lung infection has cleared. Rose  thinks she will some day totally quit.  

   Elsie also has made some significant strides since she came to  SERV.  Previously she had lived in a boarding house where  “everything was sickness, sickness, sickness,” she says. “I dressed  in raggedy clothes, taking care of sick folks.”  A friend at a self-help  center told her about SERV. “She said, ‘You can live decent in a  house in a community that doesn’t have a name on the door.”

   Elsie first lived in a SERV group home in Hudson County before  moving to Miss Hadley’s home. There, she learned from Miss Hadley  how to control her negative speech about her illnesses.  “Miss  Hadley said, ‘You’re going to learn to experience something besides  sickness.” Now, after some practice, Elsie prefers to talk to her  housemates and friends about the things that bring her joy:  Her  primitive artwork, needlepoint, gospel music and writing.

   Her latest writing project is called “Reflections,” a booklet with  hand-drawn illustrations about events in her lifetime: her first trip to  the beach, fishing, church, the election of Barack Obama as the first  African American president, and of course, “The Hadley Residence.”  On her own, she copyrighted the book with the Library of Congress  with the hope of selling it to church members.

   She is encouraged by the response she has received for her ink and  watercolor, “He Lives,’’ a depiction of Jesus.  She says  representatives of the local chapter of the National Alliance on  Mental Illness, where she attends a support group meeting once a  month, are interested in having three of her paintings displayed in  public buildings in Jersey City.

   Elsie is looking forward to expressing her creative talents at SERV’s  8th Annual Recovery NJ Conference in April, where she plans to  attend the “Hobbies” workshop. All of SERV’s consumers and their  families are invited to the daylong conference free of charge.

   Miss Hadley, Elsie and Rosa share a bond not only in their home  but in their church, as well. Every Sunday, the three attend Bible  study, followed by morning worship at New Hope Baptist Church in  Jersey City.  Miss Hadley also holds the positions of trustee and  church nurse.  A traditional role in the church, the nurse does not  administer medicines but assists members if they are feeling ill.

   Attending church services and having a loving home have been  positive influences in the women’s recovery, says Miss Hadley. “I can  see how the ladies are growing spiritually. They are more confident.   They know someone cares about them and is concerned about their  wellbeing.”

   When asked how long she plans to be a family care provider with  SERV, she answers, “This is a commitment for me and a blessing to  me. It doesn’t seem like a job, it’s just something that I do.  I will  do it as long as I am able.”

   SERV has Therapeutic Foster Care programs for adult consumers in Mercer, Hudson   and Passaic counties.  To find out more information about becoming a family care   provider, call SERV Behavioral Health System, Inc. at (609) 406-0100.

 



 

 

 

 

 

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