The vision is to build what I call, Quinn’s House, an actual facility for transition care. “When one is too sick to go home and too well to stay in the hospital.” This ‘house’ is an option for patients in need of its programs and services. 

We want to make it easier for these patients to become independent, so they don’t have to choose between food, rent or medication. So, they can receive the support they need, such as coaching, to keep them moving forward. 

This ‘house’ would provide the services they need or access to them, to allow them to grow stronger, more independent as well as ease their way back into their routine. 

Often times the patients and families can travel far to a hospital and spend months there. The decision to go home can come very quickly, without much time to prepare or to be full ready.,

This option helps. And here’s how. 

The primary benefit, for this age group, is peer accountability! This is what they need to recover, grow and thrive, in their own way. They want to be held accountable, they want to succeed, and they need their peers around them to do it. To see each other progress, to watch them grow, to have this community is so impactful. 

All the service provided. Nurses, doctors, Medical visits, transportation to these appointments, counseling, coaching, privacy, community. Supervision. Meals. 

It brings people together to recover, rather than isolate them when they need others the most.  It gives the opportunity for them to learn how to care for themselves, to get involved in their own care. They could get in the kitchen, to learn how to cook a low sodium meal and make it something they want to eat, a chef, might be happy to come in a do a class for them.