How Kittens Are Giving Nursing Home Residents A New Sense Of Purpose

November 18, 2016

Many people who move to senior living centers at the end of long, productive, lives — especially those experiencing forms dementia — find themselves frustrated.

Thanks to a wonderful new program called "Bottle Babies", senior living residents are regaining a sense of purpose.

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

The program allows seniors to feed and play with orphaned kittens who are in need of 24/7 care.

Rebecca Hamilton, the health service director at Catalina Springs Memory Care, came up with the idea to bring kittens to the facility. She's a veteran kitten fosterer at Pima Animal Care Center and knows that really young kittens require constant care. She thought having the residents at Catalina Springs look after them might be a mutually beneficial program.

From the moment the kittens arrived, the staff noticed a significant, positive change in the residents' moods.

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

"We have noticed that [in] interacting with the kittens, we have residents who struggled with putting complete sentences together, or struggled to find words, could all of a sudden communicate," Hamilton explained about the kittens' effect on the residents. "They could look at you and say, 'This kitten is hungry' or 'I love this little baby.'"

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

It's a win-win relationship.

The kittens' weights have nearly doubled since the residents took on the around-the-clock job of bottle feeding them.

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

The feeling of being useful and productive can often be the best medicine when dealing with an incurable disease like Alzheimer's and Dementia.

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

"To some it may seem peculiar at first: Residents who are in need of around-the-clock care themselves, given the task to care for these young kittens," Catalina Springs Memory Care Executive Director Sharon Mercer, said. "But there are skills, emotions and needs that do not just leave a person with Dementia or Alzheimer's. The desire to give love and receive love remains. The kittens have given us the opportunity to nurture this human condition that lies in each and every one of our residents."

nursing home bottle feeds kittens
Pima Animal Care

(h/t) Upworthy. Photos via Pima Animal Care. Read more on Pima.gov.


feel good videoDogs Are Forced To Wear The Things They Steal — And It’s Hilarious

feel good storiesThe Father Who Never Left His Son Behind

feel good storiesHow A Silly 11-Second Song About Dr Pepper Changed Her Life Overnight

feel good storiesMan’s Best Friend: The Story Behind An Unforgettable Tomb In London

feel good storiesSenior Cat Labeled 'Sad And Scared' Finds Forever Home

feel good storiesShe Could Have Kept Walking. Instead, She Stopped And Saved A Life

feel good videoMan Takes A Bull To Starbucks For A Pup Cup

feel good videoHis Kids Wanted To Help With His Videos, So He Let Them Narrate — It’s The Cutest Thing

feel good video'You're a Unicorn': The Dementia Caregiver Who Just Stunned The American Idol Judges

feel good videoCat Steals The Spotlight By Singing Exactly Like His Owner

feel good videoMeet Ella: She's 104, A WWII Veteran, And Swears By Peanut Butter