Village Model for Seniors “Promising” But Challenged by Financial Sustainability

| August 19, 2012

The Village model, which promotes aging in place by using member supports, vetted service referrals, and neighborly interactions, is a “promising” model for addressing service needs among middle-class seniors who want to remain in their homes and communities, but it does face some challenges, finds a 2011 study recently published in The Gerontologist

Most of the Village models operate autonomously, and rely on membership fees and donations to remain financially viable.

“Villages provide a variety of support services designed to help members age in place, meet service needs, and promote health and quality of life,” the study’s authors found. “Members predominantly are aged 65 years or older, White, non-Hispanic, homeowners, and have care needs that are slightly lower than those of the elderly U.S. population overall.”

However, the study says that financial sustainability for the model is “apt to be a challenge unless Villages secure more stable sources of funding.” 

The model could become more sustainable through affiliations with social service agencies and other sources that could lend technical and financial assistance.

Ultimately, there needs to be more observation and evaluation of the Village model to determine its impact on seniors’ ability to age in place, and its ability to be sustainable long-term. 

The study, “The ‘Village’ Model: A Consumer-Driven Approach for Aging in Place,” can be accessed here

Written by Alyssa Gerace


Category: Senior Housing, Senior Living

Comments (1)

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  1. Dan Mitchell says:

    I think this is a great model. In my community, Lancaster PA, we have a group called the Lancaster Downtowners (http://www.lancasterdowntowners.org/). They are a fairly large group of seniors that wants to age in place vs moving to a retirement community or nursing home. They offer discounted services/repairs, events, a call center to order rides, volunteer services to prepare meals, light housework etc. They are taking charge of their own lives, coming up with an Aging in Place plan and executing on it. That is more than 99% of the rest of the population that buries their heads in the sand. Bravo to the planners.