| Literature DB >> 26106983 |
Jean L Lloyd1, Nancy S Wellman.
Abstract
Nutrition interventions are important as the older population, most of whom live in the community, increases in size and diversity. They are key to leading a healthy, functional life and mitigating chronic health conditions. The Older Americans Act Nutrition Program served 86.3 million congregate and 137.4 million home-delivered meals to 1.6 million and 850,000 older adults, respectively (2012). Congregate and home-delivered participants were older, poorer, sicker, more functionally impaired, and at a greater risk of institutionalization than the general U.S. older population. The Nutrition Program is publically and privately funded. About 44% of congregate and 30% of home-delivered expenditures are from federal sources, which dropped from $25 per older adult in 1990 to $12 in 2013. Despite multiple funding sources, funding is insufficient for the expanding older population. Health, nutrition, and social service professionals need to coordinate their community-based services to truly help older adults remain in their homes.Entities:
Keywords: Meals on Wheels; congregate meals; home-delivered meals; hunger; malnutrition; older adults; senior centers
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26106983 DOI: 10.1080/21551197.2015.1031592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Gerontol Geriatr ISSN: 2155-1200