# Development of a Spillover Effect Assessment Tool for Age-Friendly Communities

**Authors:** Sophia Casale, Caitlin Coyle, Shayna Gleason, Kathy Black

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1695 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new tool to assess unexpected positive outcomes of age-friendly community initiatives across different cultures and resource levels.

## Contribution

A conceptual framework and assessment tool for identifying and measuring spillover effects in age-friendly communities.

## Key findings

- Spillover effects of age-friendly initiatives are often under-recognized and underreported.
- The spillover assessment tool revealed diverse cultural perspectives on spillover outcomes.
- The tool shows promise for measuring systems change in age-friendly communities globally.

## Abstract

Efforts to measure the impact of age-friendly initiatives are just beginning to take shape. Knowledge to date suggests that there are unexpected positive outcomes of the age-friendly process that go unreported. Addressing this gap, we present the development of a conceptual framework and corresponding practice assessment tool for identifying, documenting, and disseminating age-friendly ‘spillover’. Our framework was developed through the triangulation of multiple data collection methods. A comprehensive inductive review of the age-friendly literature (n = 213); a representative cross-national sample of progress reports (n = 44); and insights from conversations with local, state, regional, and global stakeholders (n = 9) informed the building of the conceptual model and tool creation. Additionally, global pre-testing of the spillover assessment tool was conducted through interviews and feedback questionnaires from an internationally representative sample of age-friendly community country affiliates (n = 23) and additional community-level leaders. Results from this research suggest that although the necessary elements of spillover are alluded to, the full realization of the spillover process as a function of systems change is under-recognized. Pre-testing the tool for assessing spillover in age-friendly community work revealed diverse cultural perspectives on spillover outcomes, but highlighted the ubiquitous nature of spillover as a measurable dimension of impact. This framework and assessment tool development offers cross-national implications for age-friendly practice, systems change policy, and future research and evaluation. The tool demonstrates promise for improving the ability of age-friendly initiatives across international settings with differing resource levels and cultural contexts to assess previously underreported effects that demonstrate systems change.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763461