5 minute read
Opinion
l etter
ENSURING SENIORS LIVE A NOURISHED LIFE
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BY LILI COLEMAN
For the first time in U.S. history, older people are projected to outnumber children. The year 2030 will mark this important demographic turning point according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2017 national population projections. By then, all baby boomers (those born between 1946 and 1965) will be older than age 65.
This fact alone, plus the fact that many of the older population live miles from their family members and rely on local services, drives our mission.
Seniors represent a growing segment of the hunger crisis in America. There are nearly nine million seniors facing the threat of hunger today and by 2050 this number will be nearly equal to the populations of our country’s four largest cities combined. What is more, one in four seniors live alone with one in five reporting feelings of loneliness.
In Beaufort County, 15 percent or 28,814 of the population are seniors, 33 percent or 9,509 of those seniors are living alone.
Meals on Wheels, Bluffton-Hilton Head locally addresses three of the biggest threats to our seniors and others who are homebound, inadequate nutrition, isolation, and safety. The volunteers deliver much more than a meal. They provide the safety check, a warm smile and friendly conversation, that enables those we serve to remain in their own homes, where they want to be.
Nutritious hot meals are delivered Monday through Friday, and one frozen meal for Saturdays by approximately 140 dedicated volunteer drivers. We rely on caring volunteers, who use their own vehicles, and pay for their gas and related vehicle costs to ensure clients receive daily meals. Each visit includes a wellness check and provides an opportunity to prevent social isolation, an important part of our mission.
By the end of 2022, over 36,000 meals will be delivered compared to 18,463 in the 2019 COVID outbreak. With the growing price of food, this outreach to fight food insecurity faced by our most vulnerable neighbors is more critical than ever.
The need will continue to grow in our community. We know there are more people out there that need these services.
In 2021, 84.5 percent of clients were 71 years of age or older, and 58.2 percent were female. Meals are provided to 38 veterans. Clients living alone account for 105 clients, and 139 had an annual income of less than $23,000. Clients self-identifying as whiteCaucasian account for 64.5 percent of our clients, and 35.4 percent of clients are black-African, multi-racial or choose not to self-identify. Meals on Wheels saves billions of dollars in Medicaid, health, and longterm care expenses. In fact, for every $1 invested in Meals on Wheels, we save up to $50 in Medicaid spending. The Bipartisan Policy Center ran the study with the help of Ananya Health Innovations, a health policy consulting firm, to determine how a meal-delivery benefit would affect Medicare.
The future presents several challenges. Adjusting meal offerings to represent culture, heritage, age, and dietary needs is one of the goals to better serve the clients.
Meals on Wheels, Bluffton-Hilton Head continually appraises the quality of the meals, the service, and the expanding needs of the clients.
For example, locally and nationally, personal care and combating loneliness are real threats to this population’s well-being.
Our goal is to support the whole person, ensuring that every senior and homebound resident in our community has a chance to live a fully nourished life, with independence and dignity, for as long as they are able.
Meals on Wheels, Bluffton-Hilton Head has served the local community since 1979, and we serve all prospective clients, free from discrimination and regardless of their ability to pay for meals.
MEET
NINA GREENPLATE
NINA GREENPLATE, FEATURED WRITER
Nina Greenplate is a Pennsylvania native born with a southerner’s heart. She is a freelance writer and editor, with a great love for people and their stories. Nina is degreed in, and a student of, English literature, journalism and communications.
Poetry is a favorite, and she enjoys reading works by Mary Oliver, Langston Hughes and Walt Whitman. Several years ago, she self-published her first book of poetry entitled Bloom, and continues to write creatively each day.
Nina is second-generation Sicilian, and enjoys making homemade sauce and meatballs, although admits that’s where her culinary skills begin and end.
Island life with her husband Brian, and sons Brandon and Evan keep her happy and busy, as does her church family.
ONLINE EXCLUSIVE
TERRIFYING TALES
BY NINA GREENPLATE
The Lowcountry is filled with fascinating, haunting tales: from broomstick hags and ghostly pirates to headless Civil War specters seen cleaning their weapons.
The haunted tales run deep, and whatever your position on truth versus fiction, the accounts are nothing short of mysterious.
The Lighthouse and the Girl in the Blue Dress
In 1898 Lighthouse Keeper Adam Fripp was said to be tending the range light in Palmetto Dunes during a vicious hurricane. Fripp suffered a heart attack as his young daughter, Caroline, in her long blue dress, went up to search for him.
Near death, he implored her to “keep the light burning no matter how dangerous the storm.” She followed her father’s dying request but soon met her demise. On stormy nights, sightings of a luminous girl in a blue dress have been reported moving around the lighthouse grounds. Historical transcripts reveal no Fripp ever having been a lighthouse keeper.
The Castle
This involves an Italian Renaissance mansion in Beaufort referred to as “The Castle.”
Legend has it that a mischievous court jester was exploring the new world with Jean Ribaut in the late 16th century. After the jester’s death, he attached himself to a particular home, which during the Civil War was used as a military hospital and later a morgue. Families living there reported sightings. The jester was said to often show himself to children.