Anonymous wrote:Try South Jersey. Lots of rural land, and not too far from Philadelphia.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you should plan to grow elderly and infirm on acreage...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emergency healthcare poster here. OP you want to be not just near a hospital. The goal for the retirement years is a cath lab and a certified stroke center within 20 minutes in all weather.
Any hospital can stabilize a broken wrist, and something like oncology can easily be a planned, regularly scheduled drive. But it’s those level I stroke and cardiac response facilities that make me difference between many more quality years vs. a handful debilitated years in rehab+nursing home then the end.
Side note: don’t count on mediVac. Especially in snowy (NH) and snowy mountainous (WV, NM) climates. They won’t risk the flight staff’s life for a stroke response (but might for a catastrophic pediatric trauma)
How realistic is that if you don't live in a big city? I'm actually being serious, not snarky. And the issue with big cities is the gridlock. They won't lifelight you for a stroke, and they can't get through the gridlock in 20 minutes, even inside the beltway. This I've seen firsthand. So is that a smallish city? Do you have suggestions, or is there a good way to look it up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper Valley. You have Dartmouth Hitchcock hospital right there and actual retirement communities, but can live just 10 minutes away and in the middle of nowhere. It’s also easy to pick a tax/property situation that suits your needs because it’s right on the VT/NH border.
Seconding this! Also, if there’s ever a reason to go to Boston, it’s a straight shot of 120 miles / 2 hours to downtown Boston.
This was my first thought too. It's the perfect combination of rural with access to medical services and some cultural aspects due to the college, and not too far from a major city with top tier medical facilities. Lebanon NH has an airport with commuter flights so you don't have to drive to Boston to fly elsewhere. It's about the same distance to Hartford-Springfield airport as to Boston as well. Of course you have to like cold winters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper Valley. You have Dartmouth Hitchcock hospital right there and actual retirement communities, but can live just 10 minutes away and in the middle of nowhere. It’s also easy to pick a tax/property situation that suits your needs because it’s right on the VT/NH border.
Seconding this! Also, if there’s ever a reason to go to Boston, it’s a straight shot of 120 miles / 2 hours to downtown Boston.
Anonymous wrote:Emergency healthcare poster here. OP you want to be not just near a hospital. The goal for the retirement years is a cath lab and a certified stroke center within 20 minutes in all weather.
Any hospital can stabilize a broken wrist, and something like oncology can easily be a planned, regularly scheduled drive. But it’s those level I stroke and cardiac response facilities that make me difference between many more quality years vs. a handful debilitated years in rehab+nursing home then the end.
Side note: don’t count on mediVac. Especially in snowy (NH) and snowy mountainous (WV, NM) climates. They won’t risk the flight staff’s life for a stroke response (but might for a catastrophic pediatric trauma)
Anonymous wrote:I live on 12 acres outside Santa Fe. Two hospitals and multiple urgent cares are a minute drive. Emergency services typically respond in under 7 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Look near Roanoke, VA. Carillion Clinic and Hospital there is good.
Anonymous wrote:Upper Valley. You have Dartmouth Hitchcock hospital right there and actual retirement communities, but can live just 10 minutes away and in the middle of nowhere. It’s also easy to pick a tax/property situation that suits your needs because it’s right on the VT/NH border.