By U.S. Health & Human
Services Secretary Xavier Becerra
I remember working alongside my
father during my youth paving and repairing Sacramento roads. My father was
a strong man who woke up in the early morning hours every day, went to
work, and returned home to do more work around the house. As he grew older,
his body might have aged, but his resilient and hard-working spirit stayed
the same. “Don’t confuse them with your lean in,” he would tell me when I
drafted remarks to constituents. “Tell them about GANAS!” In my home GANAS
mean guts, grits, and game, and my father had a lot of GANAS.
Throughout his life and until his passing two years ago, my
father remained committed to his community and to his family. And despite
the sadness of having to say goodbye, I took satisfaction in being able to
care for him and assist him as he led a plentiful life during his golden
years.
Like my father, since the beginning of the pandemic, older
Americans have shown a lot of GANAS through the disproportionate challenges
they have faced. Isolated from their families and friends, separated from
community resources, and under siege from a pandemic that put them at far
greater risk of serious illness and even death, millions of older Americans
set an example of resilience for us all to follow, by overcoming hardships
and even finding new ways to thrive. Older Americans are themselves a
“Community of Strength,” and our nation is stronger when they can
contribute their knowledge, skills and example to the communities in which
they live. Older Americans have played an important role in helping our
nation weather this crisis, and they will continue to play an important
role as we recover. Now it is important that we assist our older adults in
their later years.
During Older Americans Month, we recognize and celebrate these
contributions, and recommit to our work to empower older adults, so they
can live as independently as possible and continue to participate fully in
their communities and our country. Here is how:
- HRSA-funded health centers
deliver affordable accessible, quality, and cost-effective primary
health care to nearly 30 million people each year, including more than
8 million people age 50 and older.
- Vaccination is critical for
older adults, but many have had difficulty making or traveling to
vaccination appointments or have faced other barriers to taking this
important step to protect themselves from COVID-19. With funding from
CDC, the Administration for Community Living (ACL) issued nearly $100
million in grants to the aging and disability networks to provide
critical services to help older adults and people with disabilities
overcome these barriers. ACL, the Office for Civil Rights (OCR),
and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE) published several new resources and guidance on April 13, 2021
to help states, vaccination providers, and others leading COVID-19
response activities improve access to vaccines for older adults and
people with disabilities.
- Funded through the American
Rescue Plan, ACL issued grants totaling $1.4B to help older adults
recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. Among other benefits, these grants
will help accelerate vaccinations of older adults, support family
caregivers, provide meals and other nutrition services, help older
adults connect and engage with others to reduce social isolation, and
re-open senior centers.
- Building on work they have
done throughout the pandemic to uphold the rights of older adults and
people with disabilities to non-discriminatory access to medical
resources, OCR this week announced the successful resolution of a
complaint against the State of Arizona. As a result, Arizona’s crisis
standards of care guidelines were revised to reflect legal
requirements and best practices regarding the needs of older adults
and people with disabilities.
- The Administration for
Children and Families (ACF) has provided grants to all states,
territories, and several tribes over the past several years to
establish, expand and evaluate kinship navigator programs, which
provide an important mechanism to support kinship caregivers, such as
grandparents. The Census Bureau estimates that there are 2.7 million
grandparent caregivers in the United States.
- The CDC and the Alzheimer’s
Association, with contributions from the Indian Health Service and
guidance from tribes and tribal organizations, produced the Healthy
Brain Initiative Roadmap for Indian Country, the first-ever public health
guide focused on dementia in American Indian and Alaska Native
communities.
- The Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), in collaboration
with OCR, developed the Guide to Getting and Using Your Health Records
to help everyone – patients and their caregivers – learn about their
rights to get, check and use their health information to take control
of their health, well-being, and safety.
- The CDC’s Division of
Injury Prevention launched the national Still Going Strong Campaign on
May 6, 2021 to raise awareness of the leading causes of unintentional
injuries and deaths in older adults, age 65 and older, so that older
adults can stay healthy and independent longer.
- The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) has provided states with guidance for
receiving increased federal funding for home and community-based
services (HCBS) through the American Rescue Plan. HCBS make it
possible for millions of seniors and people with disabilities and
chronic illnesses to live in the community and to avoid institutions.
Growing old is a road that we all travel if we are fortunate,
and most of us will need assistance – whether that is from family or
friends, or through services provided in our homes – to travel it in our
own communities. As we build back better, the Biden-Harris Administration
has committed to ensuring that we build the infrastructure we need to
provide those services and support informal caregivers. This Older
Americans Month, I think of my father and his example and guidance, and as
Department we recommit to doing our part to honor older adults and to
empowering them to continue living full, healthy and independent lives.
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