New Senior Housing? The MEDCottage

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A Fairfax County (VA) official dubbed it "The Granny Pod.’  He can’t stand the invention a Virginia minister created to help people live at home when they need long-term care.  But others look at it and say it’s ingenuity for the Age Wave and a person’s desire to live at home.

What do you think of the MEDCottage (it’s not actually called the Granny Pod)?

A little background . . . According to a Washington Post article:

Rev. Kenneth Dupin, who leads a small Methodist church in Southern Virginia, has a vision: As America grows older, its aging adults could avoid a jarring move to the nursing home by living in small, specially equipped, temporary shelters close to relatives . . .

As senior minister at what was then Aldersgate Wesleyan Church in Falls Church, Dupin visited a shut-in named Katie. Her husband had served in the Eisenhower administration, and she liked to show off photographs of them dancing at a White House ball.

On one visit, Dupin found Katie in tears. Her adult children had arranged for her to go into a nursing home. Workmen were busy fixing up her home for sale. When he later visited her at the nursing home, she was miserable.

"When I got there, she was absolutely devastated, and she asked me if I could take her home. That stuck in my head — the patheticness of it," Dupin said.

The MEDCottage, like an RV, could be hooked up to a house’s electrical and water system.  It could be wired with sensors and other technology and would lease for about $2,000 per month.   Interestingly, an online poll (non-scientific) you can take here shows a majority of people would buy it.