LifePath’s Community Engagement Center Open House Provides Information and Support

The Hospital to Home Program Meets Patients Where They Are

Aminta Lara-Peters: A Life of Volunteering Comes Full Circle

New Graduates “SHINE” a Light on Medicare

LifePath’s Dean Lagrotteria on WHAI

Community Engagement Center (CEC) Donations: What We Need

How Long-Term Care Ombudsman Volunteers Support Residents

Money Management Volunteers Kelly Gagnon and Ken Heider Love Seeing the Numbers Come Together for Their Clients

Take Flight at Northfield Mount Hermon’s Free Concert, While Supporting Meals on Wheels!

Older Relatives Raising Children: Many Local Options for Support Available

Is It Possible To Love One’s Job? LifePath Employees Explain Why They Do.

Get $50 Worth of Farmer’s Market Coupons for Free!

three women standing and conversing in a building
CaregiversCommunity Engagement Center (CEC)Stories

LifePath’s Community Engagement Center Open House Provides Information and Support

Information and support, along with free chair massages, were offered at the Community Engagement Center (CEC) Open House, which took place on Wednesday, November 13, at LifePath. Speakers included Meghan Lemay, from the Alzheimer’s Association, who presented on both “Communication Techniques for People with Dementia” and “Responding to Dementia-Related Behaviors,” and Sue Tracy, from All

Smiling headshot of Celene Livermore, Community Care Coordinator
A Caregiver's StoryHospital to Home ProgramInformation & Caregiver Resource CornerStories

The Hospital to Home Program Meets Patients Where They Are

Celene Livermore is the Community Care Coordinator at LifePath. She has served in this role since June 2023. “I have a background in Health Information Management (HIM) and was led to LifePath out of a desire to work directly in the community assisting those in need,” says Celene. She explains that her position is split

Aminta sitting outside and smiling.
Long-Term Care OmbudsmanStoriesVolunteering

Aminta Lara-Peters: A Life of Volunteering Comes Full Circle

Aminta Lara-Peters, who helped people throughout her life, including as a Peace Corps volunteer in Colombia, passed away on June 17, 2024, at age 83 at her family home in Northfield, MA.  Aminta lived with her husband Malcolm Brian Peters, her daughter Olivia Lara-Cahoon, her daughter’s spouse Yaki, and her grandson Mauro, now 5 and

L to R: Kathleen Gouveia, EOEA SHINE Training Coordinator; Lorraine York-Edberg, SHINE Regional Program Director; Caroline Solan, SHINE Graduate; Kyra DeCarlo, SHINE Graduate & LifePath Senior Program Assistant for SHINE/Quality Assurance; Karlena Henry, SHINE Graduate & LifePath Information and Caregiver Resource Center (ICRC) Resource Consultant; Beverly MacLeod, SHINE Graduate; Lauren Hannigan, SHINE Graduate; Janice Barnes, SHINE Graduate; Gary Yuhas, LifePath Executive Director; and Susan White, LifePath Associate Director of Volunteer Resources.
SHINE: Serving the Health Insurance Needs of EveryoneStories

New Graduates “SHINE” a Light on Medicare

On June 21, six out of the eight new SHINE (Serving the Health Insurance Needs of Everyone) graduates received their certificates and celebrated at LifePath’s office in Greenfield (graduates Ken Heider and Lucas Schlidbach were unable to attend). As newly-certified SHINE counselors, they will work in their own communities to provide free and unbiased health

Community Engagement Center (CEC)Stories

Community Engagement Center (CEC) Donations: What We Need

Donations of the following items for the Community Engagement Center are welcomed.  

Different textured balls (dryer balls, tennis balls, wiffle balls, etc.) Different textured fabrics Art supplies  Yarn Beads and jewelry-making supplies Large buttons for sorting Larger nuts and bolts for sorting, screwing together  Musical instruments (bells, maracas, shakers, etc.)  Simple adult coloring books   Scarves for waving, dancing  Table easels CDs with music from the 40s, 50s
Money Management Volunteers Ken Heider (left) and Kelly Gagnon (right) facing the camera while standing on an outside walkway.
StoriesVolunteering

Money Management Volunteers Kelly Gagnon and Ken Heider Love Seeing the Numbers Come Together for Their Clients

The Massachusetts Money Management Program (MMMP) has been helping adults over 60, and adults living with a disability, maintain their independence for 32 years. Without the program, many individuals would face food insecurity, financial exploitation, eviction, and premature institutionalization. 

“LifePath’s Money Management program promotes and prolongs independent living for individuals over 60 who are at risk

concert band playiing with "Concert for LifePath" banner
Meals on WheelsStories

Take Flight at Northfield Mount Hermon’s Free Concert, While Supporting Meals on Wheels!

For the twentieth year, the Northfield Mount Hermon Instrumental Ensembles will again host a benefit concert for LifePath’s Meals on Wheels program. The concert is scheduled for Sunday, February 18th, at 3 p.m., on the beautiful Northfield Mount Hermon campus in the Rhodes Arts Center, at 1 Lamplighter Way, Gill, MA. The concert is free

James, 9, with his Grandma, Phyllis Sinclair
Grandparents Raising GrandchildrenStories

Older Relatives Raising Children: Many Local Options for Support Available

According to Jan Doody, Parent Educator & Grandparent Resource Coordinator at The United Arc, it is estimated that there are over 150 families in Franklin County in which an older relative is raising a child. Grandparents are often called upon to bring a grandchild into their home when the child’s parents are not able to