最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
Since it鈥檚 soft opening last October, the Adult Day Care Center at the Wah Luck House has not reported a single case of COVID-19. (Vanessa Montalbano / TheWash)

At Wah Luck House, Chinatown community takes care of its own

The adult day care center at the Wah Luck House gears up for its official opening next month while doubling down on care services.

Karaoke. Calligraphy. Traditional dancing.聽

Older adults at the in Chinatown can join a range of activities starting Jan. 3, when the center officially opens with full operational ability.聽

The adult day care center soft launched its opening last October 鈥 only offering limited and appointment based medical services due to the pandemic 鈥 after nearly three years of planning and discussions with the Mayor鈥檚 office for approval.聽

Since then, patients and staff have also hosted intimate birthday gatherings, gone on field trips and attended lectures about COVID-19 safety protocol.聽聽

Along with interactive lessons, the adult day care center also provides free breakfast, lunch and a snack to each patient on weekdays. For now, patients can show up at the center at mealtime, get their temperature taken and answer a list of questions, before grabbing their packaged food and returning home to eat.聽

But, when the center opens at full capacity next month, patients will be able to sit together at tables of eight or more for their meals to chat or play games before going off on group activities.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a little kindergarten,鈥 said Rita Lee, director of the center. 鈥淲e just want to make sure they are busy, happy and healthy.鈥

Every weekday, lunch is catered to the daycare center from Chinatown Garden, a local restaurant owned by Yeni Wong, also the owner of Wah Luck House. (Vanessa Montalbano / 最新蜜桃影像)
Staff at the Wah Luck Adult Day Care Center are required to wear personal protective equipment and maintain a safe social distance. (Vanessa Montalbano / 最新蜜桃影像)

Kwok Wing Yumg, 81, agreed and said the center has been special and convenient for him. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very nice here. They do everything very good.鈥

He is most excited to enjoy the library for some reading and 鈥渕aybe do some exercise鈥 like Tai Chi next month.

‘You gotta have a heart’

The Wah Luck Adult Day Care Center is located in the heart of Chinatown on 6th Street and around the corner from the iconic Friendship Archway.

It occupies the first floor 鈥 a 7,000 square foot space 鈥 of the Wah Luck House, the last remaining low-income apartment complex in the neighborhood. Roughly 98% of the folks living in the building鈥檚 153 units are elderly Chinese-Americans, making up the majority of the remaining Chinese population in Chinatown altogether.聽


The center鈥檚 top priority, Lee said, are the medical treatments it provides. It offers an array of medical assistance to the patients 鈥 from blood drawing, urine testing and nurses visits to transportation to and from specialists offices.聽

With a roughly 20-person staff, including a doctor who comes in twice a week, nurses, a social worker, a mental health specialist, a nutritionist and other medical professionals, Lee said the adult daycare center also prides itself on the personalized support it offers to each patient.聽

鈥淵ou gotta have a heart,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淎ll of my staff knows this too. If you are just here to make money and you don鈥檛 have a heart for the seniors, I tell them please leave.鈥

Yumg Yu Meng, 80, has lived in the Wah Luck House for six years. She said she feels the staff at the center are like her family. 鈥淭hey treat us so well. We live here very comfortable and happy everyday,鈥 she said.

On a recent field trip to the Holocaust Museum, Meng said it brought her joy to see one of her friends, a 103-year-old woman who uses a wheelchair, tag along comfortably with the rest of the group.聽

最新蜜桃影像 that trip, Lee added 鈥渢hey were so happy 鈥 chatting, taking pictures with each other.鈥澛

Staff at the center also manages and sorts each patient’s medication weekly, ordering prescriptions and filling in pill organizers by time of day to make it easier for patients to follow a medication routine.

Beginning Jan. 3, older adults at Wah Luck can sing karaoke, play bingo, get a massage and exercise during the day. Yumg Meng said she will be first in line for singing and painting classes.
(Vanessa Montalbano / 最新蜜桃影像)

The , a community service organization founded in 1883, funds and operates the adult day care center separate from the Wah Luck House, though the apartment鈥檚 leadership is as invested in giving back to the community as the CCBA is.聽

Local businesswoman and real estate developer Yeni Wong and her business partner, Andrew Agetstein, purchased Wah Luck House in 2017, looking to turn a page on from the real estate company Aimco. Tenants have long known Wong as the owner of the nearby restaurant Chinatown Garden.聽

Wong said when she bought the space it was important to her that she gave back to the community. Plus, Wong said 鈥測ou have to take care of the elders.鈥澛犅

But first, before the adult day care center could operate, the CCBA needed to prove to the Mayor’s office that there was a need for the center in Chinatown.聽

So, they went unit by unit in the building and took a survey about age, any medical conditions and income status, among other things. The answer was resoundingly 鈥測es,鈥 Lee said.聽

What makes Wah Luck so special, she added, is how different it is from other elder care facilities across the District.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e not a nursing home. We鈥檙e somewhere in the middle and that’s what makes it so great,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淏ecause a lot of the time nursing homes can be so overcrowded. I can see first hand how we can benefit the seniors but still grant them their independence.鈥澛

Starting the adult day care at Wah Luck House and in Chinatown was also a way to overcome the language barrier many of the seniors faced when seeking medical assistance elsewhere.聽

Fostering community

Since the soft-launch opening last October, Lee said she realized the social aspect the center provides is crucial. Many of the patients have begun to take depression medication as a result of isolation and the pandemic, she said.聽

鈥淪ome of the seniors will say to us, 鈥榶ou know I鈥檓 happy you鈥檙e all here,鈥欌 Lee said. 鈥溾楤efore I feel sorrow, it was like hell, and now it’s not.鈥欌澛

She said before the center arrived, many of the seniors would spend entire days alone in their apartments. 鈥淚t can be so lonely.鈥

Now, Lee said most of the seniors seem to be cheerier. She thinks it鈥檚 because they have something to look forward to every day, even if it鈥檚 just going downstairs to pick up lunch.聽

Lee described a 鈥渟weet and bighearted鈥 woman who comes to her office early every morning to sneak her candies and chat.聽

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the Chinese way,鈥 she said. 鈥淕iving. It shows your love 鈥 gratitude.鈥澛

On one occasion, Lee showed up to work late from a doctor’s appointment and missed the visit. That afternoon, Lee said the woman鈥檚 daughter called her concerned because her mother 鈥 who wasn鈥檛 sure of how to use the phone to check on Lee herself 鈥 was worried something had happened to her that morning.聽

鈥淚t shows that we really care for eachother,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淚t goes both ways.鈥

Recently, she said, another lady made food for the whole staff 鈥 though it wasn鈥檛 the tastiest.聽

鈥淥f course we ate it and didn鈥檛 tell her. It would have broken her heart, she was so excited and did it out of love.鈥澛

The center has been approved to provide for around 100 seniors who have a proven medical condition and use both Medicare and Medicaid. Right now, about 94 of those slots are filled and eight people remain on the waiting list 鈥 some of which are from within the building.

Though it is not required to live in the Wah Luck House to be treated at the daycare center, all of the current patients do.

Lee said she and the CCBA are hoping to eventually accept people from outside the building, but high rent prices in the neighborhood have made expansion plans difficult.聽

She mentioned another affordable housing building on K Street that has a large older adult population.聽

鈥淭hey come over here. They鈥檙e looking for the opportunity,鈥 Lee said. But, she said, 鈥渦nfortunately we can鈥檛 accept them yet.鈥澛

If all goes well, Lee said she also wants to invite school children to come and volunteer at the center so they can chat with the seniors and play games together.

In the meantime, Lee said she is looking forward to Jan. 3, and to more field trips, grocery trips and holiday or monthly birthday parties among the patients. She said at those events, it鈥檚 nice to see them 鈥渁ll dressed up and waving to each other, smiling.鈥澛

鈥淲e try to do the best to talk to them and help them to bring that community value back to life,鈥 she said.聽

鈥淭hat鈥檚 my goal.鈥

Vanessa Montalbano

I am a graduate student journalist at American University with experience investigating social issues and public affairs. I am currently acting as 最新蜜桃影像's Downtown reporter, with a specific focus on the Gallery Place and Chinatown area.

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  • […] At Wah Luck House, Chinatown community takes care of its own Published June 29, 2022By vanessamCategorized as Uncategorized […]

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