The Prince George Citizen

Pilot program seeks to improve seniors’ health with connection­s

- Tara BAHRAMPOUR The Washington Post

Pauline Thomas, 76, was stressed to the point of tears. The retired floral designer had just gotten a new pacemaker; her husband was fighting cancer; she needed a knee operation; and she was struggling to live on social security in Palo Alto, Calif., where the cost of living has skyrockete­d.

“People would look at me and say, ‘How’s your husband doing?’ and I’d become a big crybaby.”

But instead of prescribin­g medication to alleviate her anxiety, her doctor directed her to a program that is seeking to improve people’s health by connecting them with community. LinkAges, a pilot program launched three years ago by the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, is an intergener­ational network of people helping each other. It works as a time-bank system: if you spend an hour helping someone, you get an hour of help.

Seniors are often on the receiving end of care. But the new program’s reciprocit­y, which discourage­s a sense of obligation or helplessne­ss, further encourages seniors to take advantage. And those who do may reap the rewards of better health.

That’s because social isolation and loneliness have increasing­ly been recognized as detrimenta­l to health, leading to higher incidences of depression, dementia, and loss of daily living skills.

The idea of linkAges arose after a medical ethnograph­er spent a year at PAMF talking to seniors and family caregivers. The program took shape “at a key time when studies were coming out linking loneliness as a very key indicator of potential outcomes,” said Vandana Pant, its senior director of strategic initiative­s. “How can a health system take a different approach and look at the prevention end of care rather than the traditiona­l investment­s” associated with treatment?

The types of services range widely, from helping with household tasks and driving to playing board games or doing Tai chi to teaching someone how to make a corsage. Forty-two percent of members are people 60 and over, and 19 percent are family caregivers. Many are on fixed incomes. More than 1,000 people in 10 nearby cities are in the program, and over 3,800 hours have been exchanged.

Pant said her 86-year-old mother, an immigrant from India who lives with her, loves being able to both give and receive through the program.

“Her biggest issue in this country is a lack of vibrant community,” Pant said. At first her mother was worried about feeling obligated, she said. But then she found a way to contribute – by knitting a scarf for a family with a 2-year-old son and presenting it to them.

“The fascinatin­g thing for me was to see how much that lightened my mother’s spirit,” Pant said.

Participan­ts are reporting a sense of increased community connection, and Pant said she is talking with health systems in other states that are interested in replicatin­g the program.

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