Getting older and stronger
Barbara Diamond
Art Linkletter once wrote, “Getting Old Is Not for Sissies.”
Boy, he got that right. Bones thin, eyesight dims, cholesterol
clogs arteries, heartbeats falter, names are forgotten, pounds cling
like they never did in one’s youth and with a longer life expectancy,
Americans have more years to cope with the effects of aging. It
doesn’t have to be awful as it sounds.
To help make those “golden years” more enjoyable and healthy,
South Coast Medical Center created the Seniors 55-plus Benefits Club
in September 2002 with programs to prevent or ameliorate some of
distressing symptoms that come with seniority. The club now has more
than 1,600 members.
“I joined right away,” said Lillian Kaufman, 84, a resident of
Vista Aliso, the senior housing complex on Wesley Drive. “I figured
it would be to my advantage.”
Veteran TV newsman Jess Marlow was the guest speaker at the club’s
kick-off Senior Town Hall lecture.
“I had heard him before, but this was one of his best talks,” said
Nancy Jenness, club member and long-time hospital volunteer.
She and her husband, Larry, were the first two club members.
“We joined because we love the hospital and because the club
offers good, informative programs in the range of things seniors need
to know about: health issues, family issues, all kinds of things of
interest to us, and now, we have the time to investigate them,”
Jenness said. “Plus, there are plans for social events geared toward
seniors.”
“I think it is wonderful that South Coast hospital is taking care
of our senior population this way.”
Club membership is free and includes a Catalyst Scripts’
prescription discount card, good at 42,000 participating pharmacies,
including mail order. The card offers preferred pricing only, but
there may not be savings on every prescription. It is not an
insurance program.
“The discount is for people who don’t have prescriptions covered
in their medical insurance,” said Kate Tschudin, club program
manager.
Kaufman hasn’t used her card yet, but she plans to.
“Prescriptions are very expensive, you know,” she said.
Card holders get 10% to 50% off on prescriptions. Pharmacies
absorb the discount. Participating pharmacies include Sunset Pharmacy
on Glenneyre Street and most of the big chains, such as Vons Pharmacy
and Pavilions, hospital officials said.
Club members also are entitled to quarterly health screenings free
or at discounted rates. Screenings include a cholesterol profile,
overall fitness, osteoporosis, hearing, skin cancer and whole-body
computerized tomography -- multiple X-ray images better known as CT
scans.
Among the discounted activities is the tai chi class taught Monday
nights by Grace Bradley Boyd. Boyd, 89, is the widow of movie cowboy
star William “Hopalong” Cassidy Boyd. If he were to come back today,
he wouldn’t have a problem identifying his wife. She is an icon for
seniors.
“Gracie doesn’t look any different than she did 20 years ago,”
said Lauri Mendenhall, who first met Boyd while working as publicist
for Laguna Art Museum.
The diminutive Boyd is more flexible than most of the much younger
practitioners of the two-hour class she teaches.
“I really think tai chi has helped,” Boyd said Monday during a
break in the class.
Boyd has been a disciple of tai chi for 30 years and she moves
serenely through the forms like smoothly flowing water, all the while
coaching class members verbally. Sometimes she interrupts her own
progression to work with a specific student.
“You have to get the beginners started right or they never get
it,” Boyd said.
The club also offers a fitness class at a discount and a free
walking program.
Tschudin started the South Coast Beachcombers Walking Club and the
fitness class about six years ago. Consistently, 22 to 25 members
participate in the twice-a-week walks, Tuesdays and Thursdays. The
walks are guided and monitored by physical therapy department staff.
Fifteen to 20 participants regularly show up for the fitness class,
held from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays.
“We’re very excited about the tours,” Tschudin said. “They will be
very affordable.”
Freebies for club members include transportation to and from the
hospital for medical appointments, senior health lectures, Medicare
insurance counseling, flu shots and membership in support groups, a
credit union and social activities.
“Auxiliary functions such as the Holiday Fashion Show, the Holiday
Fair -- at which donated and handmade items are sold -- and our book
fairs have been blended into the club,” Tschudin said. “Most of our
auxiliary are members of the club.”
Lillian Kaufman has been a member of the auxiliary for 15 years.
She works in the hospital gift shop.
“Coming here for eight hours every Tuesday keeps me young,” she
said. “And the best part is you never get up in the morning and have
to worry about what you are going to wear.”
The hospital supplies auxiliary volunteers with identifying blue
jackets.
Kaufman said she never expected to live as long as she has, a
statement also made by Boyd.
“Seniors are a special population that have special needs,” said
Tschudin, who is just six months away from being eligible for the
55-plus Benefits Club. “I enjoy the opportunity to interact with them
and provide health information and activities to help them achieve a
healthier lifestyle.
“We really want seniors to think of South Coast Medical Center
when they are healthy.”
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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