# Evaluation of a Wellness Program For Affordable Senior Housing Residents

**Authors:** Verena Cimarolli, Alisha Sanders, Molly Wylie, Robyn Stone

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3002 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

A wellness program for affordable senior housing residents improved health and well-being through support from nurses and health workers.

## Contribution

The study evaluates a novel wellness program combining health support and community engagement for seniors in affordable housing.

## Key findings

- Over 94% of participants found the program's support helpful, reporting improved health and social connections.
- Residents with wellness plans experienced positive changes like healthier eating and better disease management.
- Higher life optimism and better physical health were linked to specific program services like follow-ups and exercise encouragement.

## Abstract

Volunteers of America National Services’ (VOANS) Aging with Options (AWO) program - funded by and developed in partnership with Parker Health Group - is designed to support wellness and improve chronic disease management for residents in affordable senior housing. The intervention, piloted at one housing site, provided in addition to an existing service coordinator, a wellness nurse and a community health worker to help engage residents in healthy behaviors and connect them with resources. The evaluation effort assessed participants’ perceptions of the program’s impact by implementing a resident survey (N = 69); and determined the program’s effect on health outcomes by analyzing service- and health-related data collected regularly by program staff (N = 99). Over 94% of AWO participants reported that the supports received from AWO program staff were helpful. The most frequently mentioned program benefits were an improved sense of health, enhanced well-being and safety, and greater social connection. Residents who developed a wellness plan - for which they identified health and wellness goals and steps to achieve these goals - reported experiencing positive changes such as eating healthier food, greater success controlling health conditions, and exercising more. Regression analyses conducted to identify service-related predictors of health outcomes six months after the program’s initiation showed that higher life optimism was associated with receiving more service instances of ‘follow-up with service providers.’ Further, better self-rated physical health was associated with receiving more service instances of ‘exercise/physical fitness’, ‘socialization’, and ‘encouragement to attend event/program.’” Evaluation findings underscore the program’s benefits for resident health and well-being.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762219