Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main
legal form Old law association
founding 1850
founder Gustav Schlosser
Seat Frankfurt am Main
motto The inner mission is the memory and conscience of the Evangelical Church in social questions
main emphasis Aid for the elderly, assistance for the disabled, youth assistance, addiction assistance, advice center for prostitutes
Action space Frankfurt am Main and the Rhine-Main area
people Board of Directors Martin Barschke and Holger Hothum, Chairman of the Board of Directors Max Schumacher
sales € 47,000,000
Employees 1,000
Website www.innere-mission-ffm.de

The Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main is responsible for 28 social institutions and services in Frankfurt am Main and in the Rhine-Main area . The association and its companies employ around 1,000 people in inpatient and outpatient care for the elderly and the disabled, youth and addiction care, education and service units. The Inner Mission is a non-profit organization and a member of the Diakonisches Werk of the Evangelical Church in Hesse and Nassau .

history

In 1850, the General Association for Inner Mission from existing Christian aid associations was founded in Frankfurt am Main . It was one of many associations that were formed after a rousing speech by the German theologian Johann Hinrich Wichern on September 22, 1848 at the first Evangelical Church Congress in Wittenberg as a result of the founding of the Central Committee for the Inner Mission of the German Evangelical Church in all church regions. The work of the association was largely shaped in the first few years by the Protestant pastor Gustav Schlosser , and from 1890 by the pastor and liberal politician Friedrich Naumann . Schlosser resigned from the Hessian church service in 1873 and worked as a pastor in the Inner Mission for young workers, the homeless, prostitutes and servants. In addition to his work for the existing Christian associations, he created other facilities, such as the hostel for home , the Magdalenum for prostitutes , a city ​​mission and the pre-asylum for the temporary accommodation of fallen girls .

After the Second World War , the work of the Inner Mission Frankfurt concentrated on inpatient care and care for the elderly. It was not until the 1970s and 1980s that offers for AIDS and drug sufferers and prostitutes were created. Traditional work areas such as the station hospice , the station mission and a bookstore with a publisher were transferred to other providers or were discontinued.

The Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main is led by the board with the two full-time board members Pastor Martin Barschke and the health economist Holger Hothum. The management board is advised and supervised by the administrative board with up to 10 members, chaired by Max Schumacher. The board of directors is composed of experts in finance, human resources, real estate management, construction and architecture and lawyers.

Facilities of the Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main

In the eleven old people's and care facilities of the Inner Mission, around 750 full-time employees care for around 700 inpatient or semi-inpatient with a financial cost of 35 million euros. With an annual turnover of around 12 million euros, thirteen other facilities, whose services range from addiction support to homework help, are run by around 250 permanent employees. These numbers are increased by volunteers , voluntary social year and participants in the federal voluntary service .

House on the Urselbach

At the Haus am Urselbach retirement and nursing home , Hohemarkstrasse 174, Oberursel ( ), 105 people are cared for by 72 employees at all levels of care. The annual turnover is around four million euros. The house was initially rented by the Inner Mission in 1987 and bought in 2000 and expanded with additional new buildings in 2011. World icon

Hufeland House

In November 1964 the old people's and sick home of the Inner Mission was opened in Frankfurt-Seckbach , Wilhelmshöher Straße 34 ( ), and renamed in 1974 dedicated to the doctor Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland . The establishment of a company kindergarten to remedy the shortage of staff was trend-setting in the first few years. The gerontologist Siegfried Gößling became managing director in 1971 and coined the term activating care , which became an essential part of contemporary concepts in rehabilitation and geriatrics. The implementation took place from 1973 through the implementation of occupational therapy, assisted living in the properties Wilhelmshöher Strasse 18b and 18c, the first day care in Germany in the Hufeland house. Physiotherapy started in 1974, a help center with exercise baths and hydrotherapy opened in 1976, and in the same year meals on wheels and mobile services - help with housekeeping. World icon

In 1977 the geriatric nursing school from Schloss Meerholz was taken over and in 1989 the outpatient nursing service was founded. In 2004 the living area for people with physical disabilities was created . In 2016, 203 employees and an annual turnover of € 11,608,990 repented five hundred people, including 224 in inpatient or semi-inpatient care. This also included 35 places in day care, 31 apartments for assisted living and 27 residential care places for people with disabilities. In the outpatient care service, around one hundred people were cared for in their home environment and another hundred catered for, forty of them in the senior citizen's restaurant and sixty with meals on wheels . The day care center offered 48 places, the geriatric care school 140 places.

Nellini pen

Nellini pen

In 1913 Rose Livingston donated the Nellini Foundation to the Frankfurt Deaconess House , named after the nickname Nelli of her governess Minna Noll, as a home for single elderly women of Protestant faith and made an additional million Reichsmarks available. Today, with 58 employees and an annual turnover of around four million euros, it is a fully inpatient care facility for 94 people aged 65 and over with somatic or geronto-psychiatric care needs of all care levels and is located in the Holzhausenviertel at Cronstettenstrasse 59 ( ) on the Frankfurt area Deaconess House. The building is a listed building . World icon

Meerholz Castle

Meerholz Castle

The former nunnery in Gelnhausen ( ) and the former residence of a sideline of the Counts of Ysenburg was acquired by the city of Frankfurt am Main in 1942 and used as a school camp. At the request of the Inner Mission, the American military government approved the property for use as a retirement home. The geriatric care school established in the early 1970s was transferred to Haus Hufeland in 1977 . In 1972, movement and occupational therapy with targeted exercises and training methods was used nationwide for the first time in the care service. In the 1980s, those in need of extreme care, a carpenter's workshop and the Wichern house in the old district court of Hanauer Landstrasse 23 with short-term care were integrated into the business. In 1995 the house in Ysenburg , Hanauer Landstrasse 53, Gelnhausen, was inaugurated as a department for younger disabled people in need of care and in 2010 the comastation under the name of Countess Karoline was inaugurated. In 2016, we moved into the new Haus im Park in the idyllic castle park with a pond. In 1989, an information sheet for employees and residents was created initially as an employee circular, and from 1995 as the Schloss-Postille , which is distributed four times a year. With an annual turnover of € 8,665,645 and 171 employees, the facilities of the Meerholz care home have 210 childcare places available. World icon

Waldmühle Foundation

With a budget of around five million euros, the Waldmühle Foundation has been operating nine individual service areas for 160 addicts since 1981. The foundation's namesake and largest facility is the Waldmühle therapy center.

Therapy center Waldmühle

In 1979, the Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main took over the listed former watermill Beerbacher Straße 20 in Darmstadt-Eberstadt ( ), which had previously been used as a children's home by the Waldmühle eV association and began weaning therapy. The therapy center is an inpatient withdrawal facility (rehabilitation clinic) in which up to 26 addicts, mostly narcotics-dependent offenders from Hesse, practice an abstinence for a stay of up to twelve months after submitting a cost assumption notification. World icon

Burgwald House

In Haus Burgwald , In der Mordach 3, Mühltal ( ) there are forty places available for addicts, especially those with alcohol, with the overriding goal of restoring or improving their ability to work. World icon

House Höchst

The house maximum , Klauer Straße 7, Frankfurt-Hoechst ( ), is a project for twelve HIV -Positive and AIDS diseased addicts or people with multiple symptoms. The focus of the work is reintegration into stable social structures and the promotion of social skills, as well as the development of professional skills. World icon

Transitional facility in Mühlheim

In the transition facility Waldmühle Foundation, Forsthausstraße 38, Mühlheim am Main ( ), there are limited and inpatient options available to up to fifteen addicts who want to leave the scene or who want to prevent them from getting back there. World icon

Assisted living

The residential group created in 1983 as an aftercare facility in Niedergasse 41, Pfungstadt ( ) was converted in 1997 into a shared apartment for assisted living for a total of 38 women and men with addiction, including single parents with children. Affiliated to the Pfungstadt facility is the work and employment project Multiflex , with which thirteen people have the opportunity to (re) integrate at work or school. a. through employment in janitorial services, renovation, gardening, administration and social services. In the facility at Klauerstraße 7 in Höchst there are another 29 places. World icon

Specialist for addiction disorders

The specialist office at the headquarters of the Waldmühle Foundation, Ludolfusstraße 2–4, Frankfurt am Main ( ), offers follow-up care after inpatient therapy and outpatient therapy, company health promotion and addiction prevention through advice, information events and training courses for managers on dealing with addictive substances and drug consumption, as well as addiction prevention. World icon

Elisabeth Maas House

The Elisabeth-Maas-Haus , Andréstraße 102, Offenbach am Main ( ) was moved into in 2003 is a nursing home with 69 places in six living areas. It was named after Elisabeth Maas, who headed the Evangelical Women's Association Offenbach, founded in 1903, as first chairwoman for fifteen years until 1986. In 2011 the house was taken over by the Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main, previously it was under the sole sponsorship of the Evangelical Women's Association Offenbach am Main. World icon

TAMARA

In the facility TAMARA - Advice and Help for Prostitutes in the Center for Women , Alfred-Brehm-Platz 17, Frankfurt-Ostend , three employees guarantee individual advice in order to develop new professional and private perspectives for women in prostitution, social discrimination to counteract and to raise public awareness of the issue of prostitution . In 2015, TAMARA had 476 counseling cases, in more than a third of all cases ways of securing a livelihood outside of sex work were explained, 26% of the counseling related to health issues and 15% to health insurance issues. 90% of the women were non-Germans. The largest group with 41% were Romanian women, followed by Bulgarians and Bosnians.

School meeting on the Maintower

The school meeting on Maintower , Neue Schlesingergasse 22-24, Frankfurt city center , was taken over in 1982 as a facility of the Inner Mission, the forerunner was the initiative of a Greek parents' association from 1979 for homework supervision and socio-educational assistance. Since 1989, sixty children and young people have been cared for by eleven employees and a budget of over 500,000 euros in two institutions recognized by the city of Frankfurt, a daycare center and a youth club. The offer still extends from lunch to help with starting a career.

Affiliated institutions of the Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main

In addition to the direct institutions, the Evangelical Association for Inner Mission Frankfurt am Main is involved in the following institutions and own operations with a financial expenditure of 2.7 million euros:

  • Evangelical club house Wittenberger Hof GmbH, Frankfurt am Main
  • Inner Mission Services Frankfurt am Main GmbH, Frankfurt am Main
  • Evangelisches Vereinhaus Westend Foundation, Frankfurt am Main
  • Home Association for Needy Aid eV, Frankfurt am Main, old people's apartments for 70 people.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Structural data - Evangelical Association for Inner Mission and affiliated institutions. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 15, 2017 ; accessed on January 15, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.innere-mission-ffm.de
  2. Website of the nursing home Haus am Urselbach. Retrieved January 14, 2017 .
  3. ^ Structural data - Evangelical Association for Inner Mission. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 15, 2017 ; accessed on January 11, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.innere-mission-ffm.de
  4. ^ Website of the Hufeland House. Retrieved January 14, 2017 .
  5. website Nellinistifts. Retrieved January 14, 2017 .
  6. ^ Website of the care facilities Schloss Meerholz. Retrieved January 14, 2017 .
  7. ^ Website of the Elisabeth-Maas-Haus. Retrieved January 15, 2017 .
  8. TAMARA Annual Report 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2017 .
  9. ^ Website of the school meeting on the Maintower. Retrieved January 15, 2017 .