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1828 L Street, NW
Suite 801
Washington, DC 20036
(P) 202.332.2275
(F) 202.332.2949
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Family Council Center
Family Council Center
Information, Tips and Tools
Family members in a facility can join together to form a united consumer voice which can communicate concerns to facility administrators and work for resolutions and improvements by forming a family council.
Family councils can play a crucial role in voicing concerns, requesting improvements, supporting new family members and residents, and supporting facility efforts to make care and life in the facility the best it can be. Join and support the family council at your loved one's facility! If no family council exists, join with other family members to form one.
This page contains information on NCCNHR Projects related to family councils, family council rights that are protected by federal law, regulations applying to long-term care facilities, effective council advocacy, and tools for forming an effective council.
If you have any questions about these materials, family councils, or how to advocate for good care in a nursing home, please contact NCCNHR at 202.332.2275.
* Some of the information on this webpage was developed as part of a project funded by the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Office of Health Care Quality (a 5 year project to develop and strengthen family councils in MD). Materials gathered from family councils and citizen advocacy groups are included on this site. You can download the items to use in your family council work. If you would like to share family councils materials with us, and possibly other councils across the country, please send them to jbrill@nccnhr.org.
For best results in printing use PDF format. (PDF format requires Adobe Acrobat. Click Here to get Adobe Acrobat Reader for Free).
Información en español.
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Family Council Tips
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Below are materials you can use to assist you as you start a family council:
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Family Council Rights and Federal Laws & Regulations
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- Consumer Fact Sheet: The Rights of Family Councils in Nursing Homes
- The following links connect you to what the federal law and regulations say about particular issues regarding long-term care.
- OBRA '87 (The Nursing Home Reform Law) 20th Anniversary
- Read a summary of OBRA '87, the full federal regulations, and the Medicaid and Medicare provisions.
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Learn and Take Action!
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Improve long-term care in your area, and across the U.S.!
- Visit NCCNHR's Action Center
- View up-to-date information on Congressional Hearings, Bulletins, Legislative Proposals, etc.
- Learn and advocate for restraint free care as part of NCCNHR's California California Voices for Quality: Strategies in the National Campaign for Excellence in America's Nursing Homes project
- The project provides informationand tools to train ombudsmen to engage consumers in quality improvement, by educating and engaging consumers to advance better quality care innursing homes. Consumer-oriented materials,including fact sheets, have been developed; training programs and educational conference calls were held; and materials are posted on the website.
- Advocate Effectively
- Read a list of suggestions for advocacy tips as you advocate for yourself or yourloved one, includinghow to document concerns.
- Contact the long-term care ombudsman program in your state
- In addition to acting as an advocate for residents, ombudsmen can educate residents, families and friends about resident rights, state surveys, and federal and state laws that are applicable to nursing homes and other long-term care facilities.
- Visit NCCNHR's Government Policy website
- Learn about staffing issues, view an action center, etc.
- Visit NCCNHR's Culture Change website
- Learn about the grassroots movement to transform the culture of aging inAmerica.
- Also visit the Pioneer Network's website.
- Visit the Nursing Home Compare website
- This is a tool on the Medicare website thatdisplays quality measure data, deficiencies and other information about nursinghomes. It is organized by state and county to help you search for facilities near you or anywhere in the country.
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Fact Sheets
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Find consumer-friendly information on issues affecting residents such as residents' rights, malnutrition, the use of restraints, and changing the culture of long-term care facilities.
Maryland: Tips for the First Weeks in a Nursing Home
Maryland: Sugerencias y Información para las Primeras Semanas en el Asilo de Ancianos (en Español)
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NCCNHR Family Council Projects
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Learn more about NCCNHR projects related to family members and family councils.
NCCNHR works with Virginia family councils, providingmini-grants, and with national family councils, providing support,networking, and education.
This discussion group is a listserv that enables you to send messages to others in the group, and look at previous discussions. It is for family councils across the U.S., and allows family council members to network with one another, share successes, accomplishments, and challenges, converse and get feedback, and learn about resources and opportunities available for family councils through NCCNHR.This discussion group/listserv is confidential – it is only open to family council members and family members. It is not open to ombudsmen and facility staff.
- NCCNHR's Illinois Family Council Project
- NCCNHR partnered with Illinois Citizens’ for Better Care (ICBC) to help familymembers of nursing home residents in Illinoisto organize family councils.
- NCCNHR's Giving Voice to Quality project
- The project trained nursing home residents and their families nationwide through:a series of six teleconference seminarsduring 2006; a web-based consumereducation center and the development and electronic distribution of materials toseminar participants. Calls are available on CD for purchase, and address thefollowing topics: Resident-Directed Care Planning; Restraint-Free Nursing HomeCare; Residents' Rights; Communication; Eating with Dignity; Incontinence andQuality Care.
- NCCNHR's Maryland Family Council Project
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NCCNHR's Consumer Center
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Visit NCCNHR's Consumer Center for more information, including information on the following topics:
- Residents, Family Members and Councils
- Residents' Rights
- Fact Sheets
- Federal Law and Regulations
- Making a Difference: Learn, Take Action, and Advocate!
- NCCNHR Publications
- The Long Term Care Ombudsman Program
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Family Council Exchange
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| View family council laws and legislation across the U.S.
During NCCNHR's work with family members in Maryland through the MD Family Council project, family councils shared materials that other family councils might find useful.They have given NCCNHR permission to post them here for others to view and use. Feel free to print or cut and paste from the materials below to use for your own family council. If you have materials that you think might be useful to others in Maryland, please let us know!
- Survey Used to Identify Common Concerns, Formulated by the family council atWestminster Care and Rehabilitation, CarrollCounty, MD, May 2000
- Family Council Bylaws, Formulated by the family council at Holy Cross Nursing andRehab Ctr., Burtonsville, MD
- Membership Form, Formulated by the family council at Holy Cross Nursing andRehab Ctr., Burtonsville, MD
- Sample Flier
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Long-Term Care Ombudsman Programs
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| Find contact information for the long-term care ombudsman program in your state.
In addition to acting as an advocate for residents, ombudsmen can educate residents, families and friends about resident rights, state surveys, and federal and state laws that are applicable to nursing homes and other long-term care facilities.
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Family Council DVD
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| NCCNHR's DVD "Strength In Numbers: The Importance of Family Councils in Nursing Homes" is an important tool for any family member interested in working with others to improve conditions at their loved one's nursing home. Enhance your knowledge of what a family council is, how to build a strong one, or how to advocate effectively as part of a family council. The DVD contains a companion booklet - Program Leader’s Guide with discussion guidance, additional resources, fact sheets, and other information.
Price: $30.00 per DVD or 4 DVDs for $100.00. Contact NCCNHR at 202.332.2275 to order a copy.
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Additional Resources
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Family Council Manual and Toolkit: A Guide for Creating and Sustaining Effective Family Councils in Nursing Homes, by FRIA, the voice and resource for eldercare with dignity in
New York . Itis a basic, how-to manual for those wanting to take on the job of family council leader and a comprehensive resource for experienced leaders facing new issues.It includes a CD-Rom Tool Kit, consisting of reproducible sample materials and templates that will help save time and make it easy to create written materials.The manual can be used and is available to Family Council leaders nationwide.FRIA is an independent, not for profit advocacy and service organization dedicated to improving long term care in
New York State. The cost of the manual is $30.00, including shipping. To order a copy, please email FRIA at http://fria@fria.org or call 212.732.5667.
View additional resources (organizations and printed materials) for information for Family Councils.
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