JFCS Provides Critical Services to Combat Isolation and Loneliness
- Center for Children and Youth
- Seniors
Known as America’s quietest health risk, social isolation and loneliness affects people indiscriminately. From tweens to seniors and from stay-at-home parents to CEOs, many suffer in silence from the physical and mental health issues related to isolation and loneliness.
Through the efforts of JFCS’ Center for Children and Youth (CCY) and Seniors At Home (SAH), JFCS is combating isolation by providing critical services and resources for those afflicted.
In a time when there are so many ways to stay connected (email, text, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, etc.), why are so many of our youth feeling isolated and lonely? The percent… Read More
Posted by Admin on December 5, 2019
JFCS’ New and Expanding Social Clubs Help Older Adults Stay Connected
- Seniors
Aging is happy and healthy when we are part of a warm and welcoming community. That’s why JFCS is providing a growing range of social clubs that create meaningful connection and exciting programming specifically for older adults.
Connections and Culture at San Francisco’s New Plaza Social Club
Each week, members of the Plaza Social Club meet at JFCS and Rhoda Goldman Plaza’s beautiful campus in Lower Pacific Heights. Members enjoy inspiring lectures, current events and art discussions, Jewish learning, films, music, and more. Locally sourced, homemade lunches are provided, as well as access to comprehensive services by experts from Seniors… Read More
Posted by Admin on July 18, 2019
Domestic Violence: JFCS Provides the Bay Area’s Most Comprehensive Services to Victims of All Ages
- Domestic Violence Prevention
- Emergency Assistance
- Parenting
- Seniors
- YouthFirst
Our lives can feel upside down or even unlivable if someone seeks to harm us through bullying or deliberate behaviors to maintain a pattern of power and control—the definition of domestic violence. That’s why every day JFCS’ programs work to prevent cycles of abuse so that children, teens, adults, and seniors have the support they need to make healthy choices, leave abuse behind, and live their best lives.
For Domestic Violence Survivors, Leaving Is Just the Beginning
JFCS’ Dream Program changes the cycle of abuse by providing critically needed support to women and their children so they can rebuild their… Read More
Posted by Admin on August 8, 2018
JFCS Supports Families with the Emotional Toll of Dementia Care
- Stories & Testimonials
- Seniors
Four years ago Joan became one of the every six Americans diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease each year. The 69 year-old’s symptoms progressed quickly and her husband of over three decades, Brian, retired early from his job in order to care for her while their adult daughter lives with them in their Foster City home for added support. But living on a fixed income while coping with the challenges of caring for their loved one with dementia proved more taxing than the family had imagined. As Joan’s dementia advanced, it became more difficult for her family to connect with her, taking… Read More
Posted by Admin on July 6, 2018
Exploring ‘The End of Life’ with Sophocles
- JFCS in the Media
- Stories & Testimonials
- Grief & Bereavement
- Seniors
KQED’ Forum with Michael Krasny
Death and saying goodbye—they are among life’s most mysterious and challenging phenomena. The theatrical production “End of Life” opens a dialogue about these experiences via staged readings of two Greek tragedies written by Sophocles. Artistic director Bryan Doerries joins Forum, along with award-winning actor David Strathairn and a palliative care expert, to discuss the show and making peace with mortality.
Guests:
David Strathairn, actor
Bryan Doerries, artistic director, Theater of War
Redwing Keyssar, palliative care director, Jewish Family and Children’s Services; author, “Last Acts of Kindness: Lessons for the Living from the Bedsides of the… Read More
Posted by Admin on April 16, 2018
Marquee stars put the ultimate drama — death — onstage in S.F.
- JFCS in the Media
- Stories & Testimonials
- Grief & Bereavement
- Seniors
J Weekly
By Laura Paull
As Sophocles surely knew, people often are able to absorb tragedy much more easily on a stage than in their own lives.
That’s the principle behind an upcoming performance at the Castro Theatre, where a New York-based theater collective will guide audiences to reflect on the ultimate drama we tend to avoid. After staged readings of scenes from two plays by the ancient Greek playwright, the ensemble will ask: Is death necessarily a tragedy?
“I see it, rather, as a transition,” says Judith Redwing Keyssar, palliative care director at Jewish Family and Children’s Services, sponsor… Read More
Posted by Admin on April 13, 2018