AoA and the Aging Network Bob Hornyak Center for Policy, Planning and Evaluation U.S.

Download Report

Transcript AoA and the Aging Network Bob Hornyak Center for Policy, Planning and Evaluation U.S.

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