Cross-sectoral partnerships between Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) and healthcare and non-healthcare organizations are an effective way of addressing determinants of health among older adults, according to a recent study published in Health Affairs.
Cross-sectoral partnerships between Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) and healthcare and non-healthcare organizations are an effective way of addressing determinants of health among older adults, according to a recent study published in Health Affairs.
AAAs fund and provide services for older adults to help them continue an independent life by offering transportation, meal services, and other forms of support. More than 600 of these agencies have been established under the Older Americans Comprehensive Services Amendments of 1973. AAAs partner with hospitals and health insurers to connect social services to the elderly.
Researchers examined collaborations among AAAs and social and medical organizations to determine if they significantly reduced avoidable healthcare spending among the older adult community through preventive services. A total of 368 AAAs across 1916 counties were included in the study. Risk-stratified hospital readmission rates, nursing home residents with low-care status, and total Medicare spending per beneficiary were the main measures of research while each AAA budget was analyzed to create a ratio to the total population over the age 60.
The data showed the distinction between informal and formal collaborations between AAAs and other local organizations. While informal partnerships are established through continuous collaborative work to create interconnections within a community, formal partnerships are less about coordination in the community as they are formed to achieve targeted objectives developed by that specific agency.
The results showed that on average each agency had 10.9 informal partnerships mostly with long-term care facilities and advocacy organizations. The average number of formal partnerships was 5.5 organizations. These were mostly with state health insurance assistance programs and Medicaid. The researchers found that 61.8% of agencies had programs to facilitate transitions from institutional placements and 68.2% had programs to divert patients from nursing home placement.
“As policy makers and healthcare providers consider using cross-sectoral partnerships to improve health and reduce the need for costly healthcare services, our findings have 2 implications.” the authors deduced. “First, AAAs’ partnership behavior appears to be linked to valued health outcomes for older adults, making the agencies a natural point of intervention for efforts to foster effective cross-sectoral partnerships to serve this population. Second, informal (noncontractual) and formal (contractual) partnerships may reflect different processes at the interorganizational and community levels, and therefore have different implications for service use and costs.”
References
Brewster AL, Kunkel S, Straker J, Curry LA. Cross-sectoral partnerships by area agencies on aging: associations with health care use and spending. Health Aff. 2017;37(1). doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2017.1346.
Laundromats as a New Frontier in Community Health, Medicaid Outreach
May 29th 2025Lindsey Leininger, PhD, and Allister Chang, MPA, highlight the potential of laundromats as accessible, community-based settings to support Medicaid outreach, foster trust, and connect families with essential health and social services.
Listen
Contributor: Why US Health Care Is Ripe for Change
September 2nd 2025Why is health care so staggeringly difficult to use? How do we fix it? To move forward, we first must look back, because the system we have today was not really designed, it evolved, notes Ariela Simerman, Turquoise Health.
Read More
Interhospital Transfers Occur Less Frequently for Uninsured Patients
August 27th 2025Patients with acute respiratory failure who’ve been placed on a mechanical ventilator are less likely to be transferred to high-volume centers if they are uninsured, thus increasing their odds of mortality.
Read More