Medical professionals from Washington University and Goldfarb School of Nursing at Barnes-Jewish College are helping older adults in underserved areas of St. Louis identify and address wide-ranging health problems — from osteoporosis and frailty to impaired physical function and depression.
The Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation is funding the program, called the Collaborative Assessments to Revitalize the Elderly in Our Community (CARE in Our Community), for the next three years.
“This program grew out of a successful outreach program initiated in 2005 by the Division of Geriatrics and Nutritional Science at the School of Medicine,” said Consuelo H. Wilkins, M.D., assistant professor at the School of Medicine and program director for CARE. “We have provided health assessments and/or interventions to more than 850 St. Louis seniors, primarily those who live in underserved housing complexes. With this funding, we plan to help even more.”
The data obtained from the initial outreach program found that impaired physical function caused by obesity, depressed mood and osteoporosis are major contributors to frailty and reduced quality of life. The program will visit community centers and senior-living facilities to perform evaluations and interventions that focus on these areas of concern.
“We plan to develop and implement interventions to address several risk factors for frailty and will be concentrating in particular on calcium and vitamin D deficiency, impaired physical function and depressed mood,” Wilkins said. “It’s very important to get health providers to these seniors because it’s difficult for many to get to the doctor’s office for standard medical care, and a large number of these people suffer with treatable problems that go undiagnosed.”
The CARE program will seek additional funding to improve and expand outreach efforts. This initial grant from the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation provides the program with $275,000 annually for three years.