Hundreds of Strangers Raise Over $40K to Keep 108-Year-Old Ohio Woman in Her Assisted Living Home

"It makes me feel wonderful that I have a lot of people who care," she said.

Carrie Lou Rausch has been living at the home, Sunrise on the Scioto, for the past three years since she was 105, according to her 67-year-old daughter, Susan Hatfield.

"To put it delicately, I didn't know she would live to be 108, and towards the end of last year, I knew she was getting low on funds," Hatfield told ABC News today.

Since Sunrise on the Scioto does not accept Medicaid, Rausch was facing the possibility of having to move from the facility and the community she had grown to love and call home, Hatfield said.

Hatfield did note, though, that she was grateful the state's Medicaid program "had this last resort option if it came down to it."

In a last ditch effort to keep her mother at her current assisted living facility, Hatfield said she started a GoFundMe campaign in October 2016.

The crowdfunding campaign received a few donations here and there, mainly from friends and family, but it was not until local news stations covered Rausch's 108th birthday this past Jan. 3 that hundreds of strangers began donate to the account.

Last week, more than 800 donors raised the campaign's goal amount of $40,000 -- the cost of living at Sunrise on the Scioto for a year, according to Hatfield.

As of this afternoon, the GoFundMe has raised over $56,000.

Hatfield told ABC News that she would be keeping campaign open for a little while longer, and any additional funds raised would be used to support her mother into the following year. Funds that go unused will be donated to her mother's church, she said.

"This whole campaign started small and grew little by little, and then suddenly just exploded," she said. "It's just a miracle."

On an update to the GoFundMe page, Hatfield wrote, "What an amazing testament to the existence of basic human kindness in a time when it sometimes seems in short supply."

Sunrise Senior Living, which manages Sunrise on the Scioto, told ABC News in a statement today, "We are so pleased that Ms. Rausch will remain at our community and are moved by the outpouring of support for her and the entire team who care for her. It is always our hope and intention that all of our residents remain here for as long as they wish, and we strive to support our families to help make this possible."

In a video posted to Facebook, Rausch said, "It makes me feel wonderful that I have a lot of people who care. I want to say, 'Bless you, all, and I appreciate it and I really, really thank you!"

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