The SCAN
Foundation funds new program for Santa
Clarita and South Los Angeles Seniors and
those who care for them
Planning Grant to Partners in Care
Foundation will identify ways to expand
access to vital services
LONG BEACH, Calif., Jan. 27 /PRNewswire/ --
The SCAN Foundation today announced it has
awarded a $200,000 12-month planning grant
to San Fernando Valley based Partners in
Care Foundation (Partners) with the goal of
expanding access to community-based
long-term care services for seniors and
caregivers in the Santa Clarita Valley and
South Los Angeles.
Planning for the Santa Clarita effort will
commence this month while the South Los
Angeles effort will kickoff on July 1.
The program calls for Partners to create the
"Family Care Partnership" that will develop,
test and disseminate best practices in
aging, disability and long-term care
services.
Members of the Partnership for the Santa
Clarita Valley include the core
collaborators of the Santa Clarita Adult Day
Health Care Center, Alzheimer's Association,
the Los Angeles Caregiver Resource Center,
California Health Innovation Center of
Partners in Care, College of the Canyons,
and the Heart and Stroke Association.
Additional members include the Center for
Healthcare Rights, Grandparents as Parents,
LETMESAIL, North Los Angeles Regional Center
and the San Fernando Valley Multipurpose
Senior Services Center (MSSP).
The south Los Angeles collaborative will be
assembled soon.
In addition to improving access to services,
a portion of the grant will be used to
develop a plan for a new "under-one-roof"
facility in Santa Clarita staffed by
Partnership member agencies as well as a
call center providing brief assessments and
referrals, thereby making it easier for
seniors and their caregivers to access the
array of services provided by the
Partnership.
Partners has accepted a challenge grant by
the Foundation to replicate the Family Care
Partnership model at a second site to be
located in south Los Angeles.
Dr. Bruce Chernof, M.D., president and CEO
of The SCAN Foundation, said the program
envisioned by Partners is an excellent
example of how long-term care for America's
growing senior population is changing.
"Seniors want to remain healthy and
independent in whatever settings are most
appropriate to meeting their needs.
"For
most persons that setting is in their own
home. The challenges are to design care
models that help care providers coordinate
their services and promote easier access to
those services.
"We
think the Partners initiative is a leading
example of how to address those challenges."
Founded in 1998, Partners collaborates with
health systems, social service agencies, and
public organizations to develop and test
models that better integrate and deliver
services in order to enhance seniors'
ability to remain at home and to maintain or
restore the best health and highest level of
functioning possible.
In addition to serving as the lead agency
for research and evaluation projects and
developing partnerships to increase access
to care, Partners also provides direct
services through an MSSP, an Adult Day
Health Center, and two Adult Day Programs in
Los Angeles.
About The SCAN Foundation
The SCAN Foundation is an independent
nonprofit foundation dedicated to advancing
the development of a sustainable continuum
of quality care for seniors that integrates
medical treatment and human services in the
settings most appropriate to their needs and
with the greatest likelihood of a healthy,
independent life.
The SCAN Foundation supports programs that
stimulate public engagement, develop
realistic public policy and financing
options, and disseminates promising care
models and technologies. The SCAN Foundation
was created through a contribution by SCAN
Health Plan, a nonprofit Medicare Advantage
Plan based in California.
www.thescanfoundation.org