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Plan for state experts to advise other facilities on care for Iowans with disabilities

News

July 5th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An administrator from the now-closed Glenwood Resource Center is transferring to a role at the state-run facility in Woodward that cares for Iowans with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Two federal investigations raised concerns about how residents with serious disabilities at Glenwood were being cared for and the home was closed last month.

Iowa Department of Health and Human Services director Kelly Garcia says the person she hired to stabilize medical care at Glenwood is transferring to the Woodward Resource Center.  “We did finally land a physician who was the medical director out at Glenwood,” Garcia says. “We did that through a very unique arrangement with the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, so he’s on faculty there. He works for them. We pay his salary and he’ll be moving to Woodward to assist us in lifting up the Center of Excellence.”

Garcia says the goal of the center is to have some Woodward staff help direct care providers elsewhere figure out what works best for a patient with high needs. “Or maybe an individual needs to come from some respite or short term crisis stabilization or to work on some of their skills and then that team will go out into the community and support that work with that community provider,” Garcia says, “What we’ve recognized through this transition is providers can’t do it alone. We shouldn’t expect them to. That was a space we were missing in Iowa, but we’re doing it today.”

Woodward, like Glenwood, has provided intensive services for Iowans with profound disabilities for more than a century. Garcia says the Woodward patients are not permanent residents, as was the practice at Glenwood. “It might be six weeks, it might be six months, it might be six years,” Garcia says, “but the goal would be to stabilize that individual, to understand them (and) what they need to be successful and then to work on a transition plan to a lower level of care, which in this case would be a community setting.”

Garcia says the Woodward Resource Center is centrally located and her plan is for it to be a hub of expertise for private or non-profit facilities that care for Iowans with
disabilities.