Vermont Business Magazine Improved health, reduced growth in Medicare spending and more health-savvy older adults: these are the findings of the latest federally funded, third-party evaluation of older adults living in Vermont affordable housing communities and enrolled in SASH (Support and Services at Home), a statewide, collaborative program of care and support that helps people stay healthy and remain at home.
Montpelier SASH participant Eudora has experienced the benefits of the SASH program first-hand. Just shy of her seventieth birthday, Eudora lives alone as she has for many years, with no family in Vermont. In April of 2015, Downstreet SASH coordinator Jennifer was making her daily rounds, checking in with SASH participants. When Eudora answered her door and said she wasn’t feeling well, Jennifer noticed Eudora’s slurred speech and that her face was droopy on one side; it was clear that Eudora was in need of medical attention.
Jennifer calmly reassured Eudora that she was not alone and after taking her blood pressure Jennifer quickly dialed 9-1-1. Eudora ended up with a five-day hospital stay, but Jennifer’s visit and prompt attention to Eudora’s situation prevented a major stroke and saved Eudora’s life. When Eudora returned home from her time at the hospital, calling Downstreet was a top priority. “I told them how important the SASH program has been to me and how important it is that it continue,” she said. “I don’t know where I would be without Jennifer and SASH.”
Developed by the nonprofit housing provider Cathedral Square of South Burlington and available statewide since 2011, SASH uses housing as a platform to link Vermonters with health services and programs. Services are coordinated with a vast network of community partners in affordable housing, area agencies on aging, home health agencies, providers of mental health and addiction services, primary-care practitioners and community hospitals.
The new report reviews the first four years of SASH (2011-2015). Researchers examined Medicare claims for SASH participants and interviewed staff, participants and stakeholders. They found that participants reported less difficulty managing their medications, higher overall functional status, and greater awareness of the relationship between nutrition and health.
They also found that members of SASH groups established before April 2012, which primarily served residents living at congregate, affordable-housing communities, had fewer hospital admissions and saved an estimated $1,227 per person per year in Medicare expenditures. These statistically significant results were documented for 40% of SASH participants, an impressive outcome. The participants that did not experience these same savings were in later groups created after April 2012, which included higher rates of residents living in surrounding communities vs. only those in affordable-housing properties where SASH staff are located.
Researchers surmised that differences in outcomes between the earlier and later panels could be attributed to the fact that community-based participants referred to the SASH program were found to have greater health-care needs, higher health-care expenses and “more environmental issues with their homes compared to site-based participants, ranging from inaccessibility to severe dilapidation.” Of the 4,741 SASH participants as of June 2015, approximately 25 percent were community-based.
“We are grateful to have this latest study, which shows that our initial program design — embedding SASH in affordable-housing communities and providing and connecting services to residents living there — continues to show positive results,” says SASH Director Molly Dugan. “Extending these same results to those SASH groups with a higher number of community-based participants is extremely important to us.”
Dugan adds that a recently completed qualitative analysis by the Vermont Department of Health, based on interviews with a sample of primary-care physicians, SASH participants and staff, shows that all three groups have an overwhelmingly positive opinion of the program and its impact in improving participant health.
Meanwhile, a three-year, $15 million demonstration inspired by SASH and funded by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development is underway at 40 affordable-housing communities nationwide. SASH staff from Cathedral Square spent Nov. 16-17 in Washington, D.C., providing training in the SASH model to representatives from all 40 sites. In addition, Cathedral Square Is working with the National Well Home Network in Rhode Island, Minnesota and several other states to replicate SASH statewide.
The evaluation was conducted for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services by RTI International and LeadingAge Center for Applied Research. A summary of the report and the full report, as well as links to earlier third-party SASH evaluations, are available at https://aspe.hhs.gov.
Central Vermont SASH Partners:
Barre Housing Authority
Cathedral Square Corporation
Central Vermont Council on Aging
Central Vermont Home Health and Hospice
Central Vermont Medical Center
Clara Martin Center
Copley Hospital
Downstreet Housing and Community Development
Gifford Health Care
Lamoille Home Health and Hospice
Lamoille Housing Partnership
Lamoille Mental Health Services
Montpelier Housing Authority
Randolph Area Community Development Corporation
Vermont State Housing Authority
Visiting Nurse and Hospice of Vermont and New Hampshire
Washington County Mental Health Services
