Department of Health and
Human Services
Administration on Aging
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The Aging Network
Information Memoranda
October 1, 1997
INFORMATION MEMORANDUM
AOA-IM-97-24
TO: STATE AND AREA AGENCIES ON AGING AND TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS
ADMINISTERING PLANS UNDER TITLES III AND VI OF THE OLDER AMERICANS ACT
OF 1965, AS AMENDED
SUBJECT: Independent Choices Projects
In July, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) announced awards
under their grant solicitation, Independent Choices: Enhancing Consumer
Direction for People with Disabilities. This initiative is intended to
demonstrate new consumer direction models in home and community-based
services for chronically disabled people of all ages and to research important
issues that may contribute to our knowledge base about consumer choice
and control.
Under the announcement, 13 projects received a total of $3 million. Two
types of grants were awarded: demonstrations for three years and research
projects lasting up to three years.
A description of each of the projects, along with the name and phone
number of the contact person, is enclosed. You will note that among the
grantees are the National Association of State Units on Aging, Oregon
Senior and Disabled Services Division, Miami University's Scripps Gerontology
Center (to expand consumer direction in Ohio's PASSPORT Program) and the
Alzheimer's Association's New York City Chapter.
The National Council on the Aging (NCOA), with a grant from the RWJF,
houses the National Program Office for Independent Choices and will provide
overall program direction and technical assistance to the grant recipients.
The principal contact for the National Program Office is Kathleen A. Cameron,
(202) 479-0738.
You may be interested to know that NCOA also houses the National Institute
on Consumer-Directed Long-Term Services, a partnership between NCOA and
the World Institute on Disability. The National Institute, which received
its initial support from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation, Department of Health and Human Services, and is now funded
by RWJF, has been established to enhance consumer direction through education,
technical assistance, training and research. If you have any questions
about consumer direction and choice in long-term services, please call
the Institute at (202) 479-6994.
As I indicated in an earlier Information Memorandum on Cash and Counseling,
consumer-directed services is one of the most significant innovations
in long-term care in the past decade, an innovation that promises to become
a significant option for meeting the needs of disabled persons of all
ages, young and old. I urge you to follow the progress of the Independent
Choices projects and similar research and demonstration efforts closely
and to provide them your support wherever possible.
William F. Benson
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Aging
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