Showing posts with label OAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OAA. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2011

AoA eNewsletter May 2011


Table of Contents


Top Story
    Older Americans Month 2011

AoA News
  •     AoA Grantees Impact Over 106,000 Older Adults with Proven Health Promotion Programs
  •     AoA’s May Widget Celebrates National Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month
  •    HIV/AIDS Turns 30 - Together We Can: Educate, Empower, Prevent - HIV/AIDS and the Aging Network
  • Cancer Screening and Older Adults

Other HHS News

  • NIH-Supported Survey to Study Functional Change in Older Adults
  • Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture: 2011 User Comparative Database Report
Funding Opportunity

  • Grants to Enhance Older Adult Behavioral Health Services
  • Lifespan Respite Care Program - Competing Program Expansion Supplements
  • Public Health Emergency Preparedness Cooperative Agreement
More News

  • U.S. Treasury to "Retire" Paper Checks
  • National Observances

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Leadership Council of Aging Organizations Consensus Statement on Older Americans Act Reauthorization

Introduction by LCOA on its consensus recommendations:

The Older Americans Act (OAA) is the major federal discretionary funding source for home and community-based services for older adults. Programs supported through the OAA include home-delivered and congregate nutrition services, in-home supportive services, transportation, caregiver support, community service employment, the long-term care ombudsman program, services to prevent the abuse, neglect, and exploitation of older persons, and other supportive services. These programs provide vital support for those older adults who are at significant risk of losing their ability to remain in their own homes and communities, or who need support and protection in long-term care facilities.

In addition, OAA funds resource centers that support the work of the aging services network, these resource centers address a variety of needs, including access to benefits, elder justice, multigenerational service and volunteering, legal services, financial literacy, long-term care ombudsman training, and targeted services to minority and special populations in need.

To develop and implement the wide array of OAA services, a system of federal, state and local agencies and organizations, known as the Aging Network, was established. The core of the Aging Network is the U.S. Administration on Aging (AoA), 56 State and Territorial Agencies on Aging (SUAs), 629 Area Agencies on Aging (AAAs), 246 Title VI Native American and Native Hawaiian aging programs, and more than 30,000 community-based service provider organizations. This critical aging infrastructure is the backbone of our nation’s home and community-based long-term services and supports system offering assistance to older adults. The Aging Network’s activities also benefit other populations such as people with disabilities and caregivers.

Supported by the OAA, the Aging Network has successfully served millions of older adults in the community and in long-term care facilities since 1965, and is positioned to assist the country’s growing aging population to remain healthy, active, and in their communities. With each reauthorization, the OAA has been adapted to meet the changing needs of this growing population, the changing role of family supports, and expanding research and technological advances, often with inadequate funding. Further, the Aging Network and its services have the potential to save the Medicare, Medicaid, and Veterans Administration programs billions of dollars each year by enabling older adults to stay in their homes and communities and out of hospitals and long-term care facilities.

This current reauthorization provides an opportunity to reassess the successes and shortcomings of the OAA’s ability to serve older Americans, particularly those with the greatest social and economic need. In these times of fiscal restraint, the Leadership Council of Aging Organizations (LCAO) offers in this document recommendations for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of the OAA in its delivery of core services and how it interacts and coordinates with other federal programs that serve older adults.

In order to maximize effectiveness, community-based services provided through the Aging Network must be coordinated and integrated with the various federal health care services that older adults receive. In addition, they must work hand in glove with other programs at the state and federal levels such as the Low-Income Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), fraud prevention programs, Senior Corps and other programs promoting community service, transportation programs, the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP), the Adult Protective Services Program and other elder abuse-related programs.

The goal of the following LCAO recommendations is to authorize the AoA, the Assistant Secretary, and the programs and staff across the nation to fulfill their promise by giving them the tools, direction and flexibility to provide the services that the aging population of our nation demands. Our focus is on person and family-centered care with local flexibility to serve the needs of unique communities and sub-populations. LCAO’s recommended improvements do not require major changes to the OAA’s core services or eligibility requirements. LCAO strongly believes that increasing the authorized funding for all titles of the OAA is necessary; however, provision of adequate funding is just one of the ways that we propose to improve and expand services. Additionally, any new programs added to OAA should be given specific authorization levels.

With the population of older individuals expected to grow exponentially in the coming years, the aging network faces incredible challenges associated with the influx of older individuals into OAA programs. The LCAO, which has played a significant leadership role in past reauthorizations, is committed to a reauthorization that will strengthen the OAA for both the older adults currently receiving services and for the boomers who, in 2011, have begun turning 65 years of age.

We urge Congress to update and improve the Older Americans Act, while providing the funding needed for OAA programs to keep older Americans independent and productive, thereby saving federal and state government resources. Therefore, the LCAO makes the following recommendations to strengthen and enhance the OAA.

Full Document
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Thursday, March 31, 2011

National Council on Aging: Ask Congress to Protect Services for Vulnerable Seniors

Congress is currently proposing massive cuts in programs that provide jobs, affordable housing, and volunteer opportunities for older Americans.

Negotiations are now taking place on a historic budget-cutting bill that will likely be voted on the first week of April.

The House has already passed a bill that would:
  • Cut the Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP) by 64%—eliminating jobs for more than 83,000 poor seniors in need of work and potentially shutting down the program in many communities across the nation.
  • Eliminate funding for Senior Corps, “firing” more than 450,000 senior volunteers nationwide and denying vital services to vulnerable older adults, children, and their families in communities across the nation.
  • Reduce by two-thirds Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly at a time when 1.3 million seniors have worst-case housing needs and increasing numbers are homeless.

Tell your Senators and Representative to reject cuts in jobs, housing, and volunteer programs for seniors!

Please use the sample letter below, edit it to put it in your own words, or make it even more powerful by adding a personal story about how an older adult you know is struggling to get a job or affordable housing or would be denied help or volunteer opportunities under Senior Corps.
Let your elected officials know that their constituents need help!

Recipients

  • Your Senators
  • Your Representative
More
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Monday, April 19, 2010

DOMESTIC FOOD ASSISTANCE Complex System Benefits Millions, but Additional Efforts Could Address Potential Inefficiency and Overlap among Smaller Programs

Seal of the United States Government Accountab...Image via Wikipedia

Why GAO Did This Study

The federal government spends billions of dollars every year on domestic food assistance programs. The U.S. Department of Agriculture administers most of these programs and monitors the prevalence of food insecurity—that is, the percentage of U.S. households that were unable to afford enough food sometime during the year. Other federal agencies also fund food assistance programs; however, comprehensive and consolidated information on the multiple programs is not readily available. Congress asked GAO to examine: 1) the prevalence of food insecurity in the United States, 2) spending on food assistance programs, 3) what is known about the effectiveness of these programs in meeting program goals, and 4) the implications of providing food assistance through multiple programs and agencies. GAO’s steps included analyzing food security and program spending data, analyzing studies on program effectiveness, analyzing relevant federal laws and regulations, conducting site visits, and interviewing relevant experts and officials.

What GAO Recommends

We recommend that the Secretary of Agriculture identify and develop methods for addressing potential inefficiencies and reducing unnecessary overlap among smaller programs while ensuring access to the programs for those who are eligible. USDA agreed to consider the value of examining potential inefficiencies and overlap among smaller programs.
Read/Download Report
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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

S. 3730: ‘Retooling the Health Care Workforce for an Aging America Act of 2008’

Sponsor: Sen. Herbert Kohl [D-WI]
Dec 10, 2008: Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.

TITLE I--AMENDMENTS TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE ACT

Subtitle A--Health Professions Education Related to Geriatrics
Sec. 101. Geriatric education centers.
Sec. 102. Improving geriatric training for physicians, dentists, and behavior and mental health professionals.
Sec. 103. Geriatric academic career awards.
Sec. 104. Geriatric Career Incentive Awards.
Sec. 105. National Center for Health Workforce Analysis.

Subtitle B--Improved Nursing Services
Sec. 121. Comprehensive geriatric education nursing grant program.

TITLE II--AMENDMENTS TO THE WORKFORCE INVESTMENT ACT OF 1998
Sec. 201. Core services.
Sec. 202. Individual training accounts.
Sec. 203. Collaboration between State boards and the veterans agencies of the States.
Sec. 204. Collaboration between Department of Labor and Department of Veterans Affairs.
Sec. 205. Training opportunities for direct care workers.

TITLE III--AMENDMENTS TO THE OLDER AMERICANS ACT OF 1965
Sec. 301. Family caregiver training.
Sec. 302. Redesignations in provisions for multigenerational and civic engagement activities.
Sec. 303. National Resource Center on Volunteers, Students, and Seniors.

TITLE IV--AMENDMENTS TO THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
Sec. 401. Demonstration program for personal or home care aides, nurse aides, and home health aides in long-term care settings.
Sec. 402. Medicare family caregiver information and referral.
Sec. 403. Medicaid assessment of family caregiver support needs.

TITLE V--STUDIES AND REPORTS
Sec. 501. Studies and reports.
(a) IOM Study and Report on Mental Health Workforce Needs
(b) GAO Study and Report on the Needs of the Aging Network

(c) GAO Study and Report on the Direct Case Workforce in Long-Term Care Settings
(d) GAO Study and Report on NIH Spending and Grants