Anonymous wrote:I’m pretty sure that a residential care facility I pass daily in Silver Spring was established by the Korean American community.
Then there’s these facilities:
Howard County and Baltimore County, Maryland
Lorien Health Services Korean Senior Care Centers
Lorien Health Services offers three Korean Senior Care Centers in the state of Maryland: Columbia, Mays Chapel, and Golden Living. All three locations provide residents with traditional meals cooked by Korean chefs, Korean games like yoot, and Korean newspapers and TV shows. Staff speak multiple languages and visiting pastors host religious ceremonies in Korean. Across the three centers, seniors can access skilled nursing care, assisted living services, ventilator care, and independent living.
Ellicott City, Maryland
Morning Glory Assisted Living
Morning Glory Assisted Living is an assisted living home with room to care for eight elderly Korean-speaking residents. Best of all, individuals who qualify for the Medicaid waiver may be able to receive full financial aid to live at Morning Glory. Give its website a look to learn more — it's primarily written in Korean!
Probably a long shot, but does anyone know whether there’s something similar in the area for the Mandarin-speaking community? My 80-something ILs logically understand that their house is too much for them but are also fighting the idea of moving into any kind of senior residence. The cultural aspects never occurred to me, and I think the idea would be more appealing if they had that draw of food and language.
(To answer the OP’s question, I imagine modern living conditions have an influence at least as large as traditional cultural norms. More women are working outside the home and aren’t available for high-needs elder care, plus the high cost of housing, at least in cities, makes it harder to buy/rent a home with enough space for extended families. We have a tiny DC condo and can’t afford something much larger, so taking in parents is logistically impossible no matter what the cultural background or expectations.)