
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
We know from study after study that most older adults would prefer to age in place, in their homes, with their families and embedded in their communities. But our health system is in many ways not particularly well set up to help people age in place. Medicare does not routinely require measurement or tracking of disability that leads many people to move out of their homes, and many interventions that support people to age in place are unfunded, underfunded, or funded by philanthropy rather than the government.
Today we talk with Sarah Szanton, who created the CAPABLE multi-disciplinary model to help older adults stay at home, and Kenny Lam, who used a national study to examine the need for home-modification devices. And we preview another of the AGS songs for the literature update - this one to the tune of “My Get up and Go” by Pete Seeger.
Enjoy!
-@AlexSmithMD
4.9
273273 ratings
We know from study after study that most older adults would prefer to age in place, in their homes, with their families and embedded in their communities. But our health system is in many ways not particularly well set up to help people age in place. Medicare does not routinely require measurement or tracking of disability that leads many people to move out of their homes, and many interventions that support people to age in place are unfunded, underfunded, or funded by philanthropy rather than the government.
Today we talk with Sarah Szanton, who created the CAPABLE multi-disciplinary model to help older adults stay at home, and Kenny Lam, who used a national study to examine the need for home-modification devices. And we preview another of the AGS songs for the literature update - this one to the tune of “My Get up and Go” by Pete Seeger.
Enjoy!
-@AlexSmithMD
137 Listeners
500 Listeners
700 Listeners
292 Listeners
260 Listeners
3,332 Listeners
90 Listeners
1,140 Listeners
606 Listeners
190 Listeners
514 Listeners
368 Listeners
249 Listeners
430 Listeners
373 Listeners