Glenmeadow Offers Program on Dementia and Brain Health

 In Client Press Releases

Kelsey Gosselin of the Alzheimer’s Association Massachusetts / New Hampshire chapter to speak

LONGMEADOW—Glenmeadow Learning will offer a program on dementia and brain health on Tuesday, Oct. 16 from 10 a.m. to noon at Glenmeadow. It is the third program in Glenmeadow’s fall event series, which provides free educational programming in the community.

Dementia and Brain Health: Risk Factors, Interventions, Research will be offered at the life plan community at 24 Tabor Crossing.

Kelsey Gosselin, the manager of medical and scientific research engagement for the Alzheimer’s Association Massachusetts / New Hampshire chapter, will lead the presentation.

Gosselin will cover topics from the pathology, detection and diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias to updates on clinical trials, and thoughts on prevention. She will also speak about the differences between various types of dementia and provide the latest research.

The session will include time for questions from the audience.

The program is free, but space is limited, and reservations are required. To register, call Julie Jediny at 413.355.5972 or email jjediny@glenmeadow.org or register online at glenmeadow.org/events.

Glenmeadow Learning is one of many free programs Glenmeadow offers to members of the wider community. And these programs represent only one facet of the life plan community’s mission to serve seniors across the region and to operate as a socially accountable organization.

Established in 1884, Glenmeadow is a nonprofit, accredited life plan community; it provides independent and assisted living at its campus at 24 Tabor Crossing in Longmeadow and expanded Glenmeadow at Home services throughout greater Springfield.  

To learn more about Glenmeadow and its history and offerings, visit www.glenmeadow.org.

About Glenmeadow

In the 1800s, elderly individuals without family or means were sent to live at what was called “the poor farm.”  In 1884, a group of civic leaders raised funds among themselves and other area families and purchased a house on Main Street in Springfield’s south end, establishing The Springfield Home for Aged Women. Quickly outgrowing that house, land was purchased on the corner of Chestnut and Carew streets, where a new home was constructed and opened in 1900.  In 1960, the name was changed to Chestnut Knoll, and, in 1992, it began to admit men. 

In 1993, the organization purchased a 23-acre parcel in Longmeadow to build a new community that would provide both independent living and assisted living in one building with various common areas.  This was a new concept known as a continuing care retirement community.  Existing residents from the old Chestnut Knoll property were moved to the new campus in 1997.  Shortly after the move, the board voted to change its legal name to Glenmeadow to coincide with the name being used by the developer of the property. 

Continuing care retirement communities are now referred to as life plan communities, responding to the needs of the aging population with new opportunities for care, plus creative, educational and personal exploration. Glenmeadow offerings, which include everything from senior living options and handyman services to personal care and travel programs, are provided at its Longmeadow campus and across the region through Glenmeadow at Home. Glenmeadow strives to fulfill its mission of nurturing the whole person in mind, body and spirit.

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