Aging in the Right Place for Older Adults Experiencing Housing Insecurity: An Environmental Assessment of Temporary Housing Program.

TitleAging in the Right Place for Older Adults Experiencing Housing Insecurity: An Environmental Assessment of Temporary Housing Program.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsMahmood, A, Patille, R, Lam, E, Mora, DJuanita, Gurung, S, Bookmyer, G, Weldrick, R, Chaudhury, H, Canham, SL
JournalInt J Environ Res Public Health
Volume19
Issue22
Date Published2022 Nov 11
ISSN1660-4601
KeywordsAged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging, Housing, Housing Instability, Humans, Ill-Housed Persons, Residence Characteristics
Abstract

Research on programs offering senior-specific housing supports and enabling "aging in the right place" (AIRP) for "older persons with experiences of homelessness" (OPEH) is limited. This paper presents an environmental assessment of a "transitional housing program" (THP) in Metro Vancouver, Canada, for OPEH to AIRP. Data were collected using Aging in the Right Place Environmental (AIRP-ENV) and Secondary Observation (AIRP-ENV-SO) audit tools designed to evaluate multi-unit housing for OPEH. The 241-item AIRP-ENV tool was used to assess the built environmental features of four multi-unit buildings of the THP. The AIRP-ENV-SO tool was used to collect contextual data on the function, safety, and land use of the surrounding neighborhood. Findings identified built environment and urban design features that support THP residents' safety, security, accessibility, functionality, social activity, autonomy, and identity. The THP buildings were rated '' for accessibility, functionality, autonomy and identity, while '' or '' for safety, security, and social activity. Findings point to the built environmental features (e.g., size and layout of spaces) required in the THP to create opportunities for increased social engagement among residents and enhanced safety and security. The AIRP-ENV and AIRP-ENV-SO audit tools can help inform programs across the housing continuum to develop supportive built environments that promote AIRP for OPEH.

DOI10.3390/ijerph192214857
Alternate JournalInt J Environ Res Public Health
PubMed ID36429576
PubMed Central IDPMC9691151