AoA and the Aging Network Bob Hornyak Center for Policy, Planning and Evaluation U.S.
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AoA and the Aging Network Bob Hornyak Center for Policy, Planning and Evaluation U.S. Administration on Aging U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, ADMINISTRATION ON AGING, WASHINGTON DC 20201 PHONE 202.619.0724 | FAX 202.357.3523 | EMAIL [email protected] | WEB www.aoa.gov Aging Network Infrastructure for Core Home and Community-Based Services AoA 56 State Units, 629 Area Agencies, 246 Tribal Organizations 20,000 Service Providers and hundreds of thousands of Volunteers 241M meals 28M rides 29M personal care hrs 69K caregivers trained 855K caregivers assisted 6.4M hrs respite Aging Network Strengths Large infrastructure; access to older adults, persons with disabilities Comprehensive person-centered services Trusted resource; one-stop link to aging/disability, community and health care services Experience translating EBPs System Integration and Partnerships Access To LTSS Alzheimer and Caregiver Support EvidencedBased Programs Person Centric Services Care Transitions Veteran Directed HCBS Benefits Counseling Meals and Rides Intersection of Public Health, Aging/Disability Services and Health Care Sectors – Evidence-Based Falls Prevention Programs Evidenced-Based Programs: Falls Prevention, CDSMP, Aging/ Disability Services ADRC/Care Transitions Evidence-based Activities Public Health Health Care Delivery Critical Juncture Future Activities – Link ALL 3