Innovations in Rural Aging: Community-Based Approaches to Support Older Adults
Heather Fuller

TL;DR
This paper presents community-based strategies to support aging in rural areas, emphasizing culturally relevant and locally driven solutions.
Contribution
The paper introduces diverse, community-informed interventions tailored to the unique needs of rural aging populations across the U.S.
Findings
Indigenous healing methods improve care for Native American elders in South Dakota.
Low-tech solutions by generalist providers help rural Veterans with vision loss maintain independence.
Intergenerational programs in Oklahoma effectively promote positive health perspectives among older and younger adults.
Abstract
Rural communities provide a unique context, posing both challenges and advantages as individuals age. The purpose of this symposium is to showcase innovative community-based approaches to assessing needs and implementing interventions for rural older adults across five distinct U.S. regions. Monaghan-Geernaert used a community-driven approach to examine modalities of caregiving for Native American elders within rural settings in South Dakota, finding that implementing Indigenous healing methods into care environments helps improve patient well-being and caregiver effectiveness. Kopera-Frye examined caregiving needs among rural New Mexico Latinx caregivers and found culturally appropriate, family-based solutions for caregiving despite gaps in access to formal support services. Liu et al. examined challenges faced by rural older Veterans with vision loss in Northern Florida/South Georgia,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIndigenous Health, Education, and Rights · Geriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Aging and Gerontology Research
