# Cultivating Future Advocates: Training College Students to Become Long-Term Care Ombudsmen

**Authors:** Corinne Kyriacou, Craig Rustici

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1157 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

A pilot program trains college students to become long-term care ombudsmen, addressing a volunteer shortage while enriching their education in aging and advocacy.

## Contribution

This initiative introduces a novel educational model to train students as long-term care ombudsmen, combining advocacy training with academic learning.

## Key findings

- Students are motivated by the opportunity to empower vulnerable populations.
- Participants showed limited prior knowledge of long-term care and interest in advocacy skills.
- Stakeholders support the program as a model to increase ombudsman supply and raise awareness of aging-related careers.

## Abstract

Long-term care ombudsmen play a crucial role in advocating for vulnerable populations, mediating conflicts, and facilitating communication among residents, families, and facility staff. However, there is a shortage of volunteers trained to serve in this role. To address this long-term care need, a pilot program was launched as a collaborative initiative between a university and a state department of aging. The goals of this initiative were to develop a pipeline of certified long-term care ombudsmen, and to enrich undergraduate education by providing hands-on training in issues related to aging, disabilities, long-term care, advocacy, and conflict resolution. A committee of faculty and representatives from the state worked together over the course of nine months to develop a strategy and assess student interest. This spring, twenty undergraduate students from diverse majors, and two continuing education students enrolled in a special topics course that integrated the ombudsman training curriculum – inclusive of in-field shadowing – with a broader educational foundation in aging and disability studies, long-term care and medical communication. Preliminary findings from pre/post surveys and journal assignments indicate that students are motivated by the idea of empowering vulnerable populations, that they have limited knowledge of long-term care, and that they are interested in developing advocacy skills. Preliminary findings from stakeholder interviews with faculty and state officials show support for the pilot as a model to fill gaps in the long-term care in two ways – directly, by increasing supply of ombudsmen and indirectly, by increasing awareness of aging and disability-related career paths.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762251