> On Jul 2, 2016, at 8:08 AM, Greg Troxel <g...@ir.bbn.com> wrote:
> 
> few (maybe 3 in 100) will be younger, but have some kind of mobility or
> cognitive impairment that basically is the same situation.

My uncle was in a hospital-like nursing home (very institutional) which as full 
of old people, while he was in his 40's - because a big piece of his brain was 
damaged and as also unable to walk. He was the rare younger person in a place 
dominated by elderly people that needed constant care, and was there for years. 
There will always be a few people outside of a bell curve, but it was a 
"nursing home" - not some elderly group home with everyone playing ground golf 
outside and making puzzles in the rec room. 

My wife works in special Education, with students with autism and other mental 
issues - they may be trying to teach them language and words for an hour and 
how to properly go to the restroom the next hour - they are both care - but no 
one is confusing the nursing homes with special education schools or care 
facilities. 

A month ago, my 90 year old godmother refused to eat and her condition 
deteriorated and ended up (for her last few weeks) in a "care facility" of some 
type (a "hospital" in Japanese just for sick very-elderly people) -  that, to 
put it very bluntly, was the last small step for many people before their 
imminent death - every function of their life, down to moving them with a 
"turning sheet" on the bed and raising their head to eat is handled. It is a 
very far cry from a group home for addicts or parolees, a "senior community" of 
55s and up that mostly live independently, or a nursing home where people live 
out their lives with nurses and orderlies for a decade or more (like my Mother 
in Law does or my Great Grandmother did).

Being able to separate them in some way (you guys decide) would be great. I 
know there are grey areas and overlap, but there are "stereotypes" of these 
facilities for a reason - there are thousands upon thousands of them in each 
country that can be sorted easily into separate buckets with no ambiguity.  If 
handling the last 5% is an issue, them maybe some extended foo:bar=yes tag 
extensions can help define the unicorns is in order - but there needs to be 
some basic tag that split them up first. Having several to choose from (As I 
understand it) make it easier for taggers and parsers to figure out what the 
amenity is.  

Javbw. 
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