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			Christian Homes, Safe Haven Hospice host Chinese guests 
			
     
            
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            [May 07, 2015] 
            Aware of the challenges facing 
			an aging population in their country, civic leaders from China met 
			with representatives of Safe Haven Hospice and Christian Homes, Inc. 
			last week to learn about the care of older adults and the terminally 
			ill.  
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			 The Chinese visitors came to Lincoln to become more familiar with 
			how to establish hospice and residential care for seniors in their 
			homeland. The visit was a follow-up to a trip last November to Hong 
			Kong and Mainland China by officials of Safe Haven and Christian 
			Homes.  
			 
			The local team of five people traveled from Lincoln to Hong Kong and 
			Mainland China to offer encouragement and consultation to leaders in 
			a variety of groups and settings. At a conference attended by 1,000 
			people in Hong Kong, the Safe Haven Hospice/Christian Homes team was 
			invited to conduct workshops. 
			
			  
			In their workshop, Dr. Paul Boatman and Greg Patterson of Safe Haven 
			Hospice explained hospice basics and how a faith-based hospice 
			works. Jeff Hills of Christian Homes described the development of 
			Christian Homes from its beginnings with one nursing home in Lincoln 
			in 1965 to a chain of 13 senior living communities throughout the 
			Midwest today. During the conference, numerous formal meetings and 
			“sidewalk conversations” addressed the question, “How can we develop 
			such services in China?”  
			 
			The Safe Haven Hospice/Christian Homes Team toured Inland China, 
			meeting with business leaders, social service agency personnel and 
			religious leaders, as well as touring major cultural sites in five 
			major cities. 
			 
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  In Lincoln, the Chinese visitors observed 
			hospice visits by the Safe Haven Hospice staff and toured Christian 
			Homes facilities. One Chinese visitor referred to “60 million senior 
			orphans” in his country. The resilient Chinese people see this as an 
			opportunity to dramatically improve the quality of life for older 
			adults in their homeland.  
			 
			The Chinese visitors and the Lincoln ministries are in dialogue, 
			focusing on applying Christian principles of service in various 
			settings.  
			 
			“The partnership for serving aging populations is beneficial on both 
			sides of the Pacific.,” Hills noted. 
			
			[Jan Schumacher, Christian Homes/Safe 
			Haven Hospice] 
			
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