A Synthesis of Findings from the Study of Affordable Housing plus Services for Low- and Modest-Income Older Adults (August 2006, 22 pages)
With the relationship between increasing age, chronic illness and disability, and growing long-term
care needs well documented, new models of delivering health-related and supportive
services are being sought that are attractive and affordable to low- and modest-income older
adults. One promising but underexplored strategy, affordable housing plus services (AHPS),
links older residents of subsidized multiunit housing to health and supportive services so that
they can "age in place." The U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the A.M. McGregor Home in Cleveland, Ohio,
funded the Institute for the Future of Aging Services (IFAS), the policy and applied research arm
of the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (AAHSA), to examine the
potential of AHPS strategies for meeting long-term care needs of low- and modest-income
seniors.
The study examined the literature on integrating affordable housing and health and supportive
services for older adults, developed an inventory of promising AHPS strategies and programs,
and brought together several hundred stakeholders from the fields of affordable housing and
aging services in four workshops convened in four regions of the country. The study found a
wide variety of AHPS programs in operation, typically at the initiative of individual housing
providers.
Inventory of Affordable Housing plus Services Initiatives for Low- and Modest-Income Seniors (*.pdf, 124 KB)
Lessons from the Workshops on Affordable Housing plus Services Strategies for Low- and Modest Income Seniors (*.pdf, 157 KB)
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