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Older Rural NYers Sicker & More Disabled, Have Less Access to Healthcare, Nutritious Food, High-Speed Internet: Report


ALBANY, N.Y., Nov. 9, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Older rural New Yorkers are sicker, more disabled, and have less access to healthcare and high-speed internet than those living in urban and suburban areas. And as the population of rural New York grows older with the aging of the Baby Boom generation and an influx of retirees, younger residents leave for jobs elsewhere.

These trends pose significant challenges and demand solutions, according to a new research report and policy paper released by AARP New York today during a virtual event moderated by Rex Smith, editor of The Upstate American and editor emeritus of the Albany Times Union (see infographics here).

Disrupt Disparities: Addressing the Crisis for Rural New Yorkers 50+ is the latest in AARP New York's multi-year initiative Disrupting Racial and Ethnic Disparities: Solutions for New Yorkers 50+, which began in January 2018.

"The pandemic has exacerbated the disparities rural New Yorkers have long faced, such as greater social and geographic isolation and less access to healthcare, nutritious food and increasingly critical high-speed internet," said AARP New York State Director Beth Finkel. "This report not only documents these and other disparities, it provides achievable solutions. AARP New York fully supports these efforts to make rural New York a more livable place for the 50-plus and residents of all ages."

"As this new report from our collaborators at AARP New York demonstrates, older adults in rural areas across New York continue to face inequities in health care, food, transportation, and other social determinants of health, and those conditions are linked to poorer health outcomes," said Nora OBrien-Suric, PhD, President, the Health Foundation for Western & Central New York. "This insightful research underscores the continued need for policies, investments and programs that strengthen the health of rural communities and improve the lives of older adults and caregivers across New York State."

"My recent report shows over a million New York households are not connected to broadband," said New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. "A stark digital divide persists in rural parts of the state and among older New Yorkers. Residents age 65 and over lack access at almost three times the rate of New Yorkers ages 18 to 64. This affects their ability to work, access telehealth services, and communicate with loved ones. I want to thank AARP for keeping these issues at the forefront of our conversations here in the state and across the country. Rural New Yorkers deserve the same opportunities as everyone else."

"The findings in this report re-affirm the urgent need to address disparities in access to resources," said New York State Senator Rachel May, Aging Committee Chair. "Older New Yorkers in rural parts of our state face disadvantages in healthcare availability, economic opportunity, and lack of vital resources like broadband. We must find actionable solutions that provide relief and close the gap. I will continue to fight for my legislation to provide a tax credit for family caregivers and other measures that support our rural families."

"The dwindling access to health care services in our rural communities is more than just an inconvenience, its a crisis," said Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara, Chair of the Commission on Rural Resources. "From population decline to a lack of high speed broadband infrastructure, a variety of factors are hindering the success of these areas. This report, along with funding secured in this year's state budget for the Comprehensive Broadband Connectivity Act, will help our state move forward with solutions that address the disparities challenging the quality of life for people who call rural New York home."

"I've had the honor of traveling to every New York county over the past 30 years in various public-service capacities," said New York State Office for the Aging Director Greg Olsen. "I know first-hand the challenges and opportunities of providing services and supports in rural areas. Under Governor Kathy Hochul's leadership, we've delivered $149 million in funds to New York counties from the various federal stimulus acts in support of community-based services for older adults. This builds on $53 million in funds over the past three years to address unmet need, much of which went to rural counties. We are also working to update the Older Americans Act and bring forward more resources that will benefit rural areas on a sustainable basis. New Yorkers and the health systems that support them are witnessing important returns on these investments: through the delivery of integrated social and clinical services that have greatly improved outcomes for older New Yorkers and their caregivers."

"Rural and underserved; these terms go together, and are made all the more complicated by how fast healthcare is changing," said Dr. John Rugge of Hudson Headwaters Health Network, which serves about one third of rural New York. "Now as much as ever, our people need food, pharmaceuticals and transportation. But they also need computers and broadband along with caregivers at the bedside."

The new report focuses on health, caregiving, telehealth and broadband as they impact rural New York, a sprawling area with over a million residents - more people than six states and Washington, D.C.

The report's chief findings:

To address these and other problems, the new report proposes solutions that include:

AARP New York and its volunteers will make the case for those recommendations and more at the State Capitol and beyond when the 2022 state legislative session begins in Albany in January.

 

SOURCE AARP New York



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