Aug. 12, 2021

NDSU Extension launches rural aging initiative

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NDSU Extension has launched the Aging in Community Project, an initiative to improve the quality of life for older adults who wish to stay in their rural homes and communities.

The area around and including Lisbon, North Dakota, and rural Morton County are the pilot locations.

The project is based on a successful model of community-based care in rural North Dakota, called Community of Care, that helps older adults live with autonomy and dignity. The Community of Care model will be adapted or replicated in the two pilot communities and be evaluated for effectiveness, replicability and sustainability.

A project of this type is needed in North Dakota, according to Jane Strommen, NDSU Extension gerontology specialist.

“North Dakota is faced with unique challenges in caring for and about its older residents,” she said. “Two-thirds of its counties are designated as frontier – less than six residents per mile. A documented shift of the state’s population from rural counties to urban areas has resulted in a higher proportion of older adults in small towns and sparsely populated locations.”

Between 2019 and 2029, the state’s population of people 65 and older is projected to increase by 32%. In contract, the working-age population (ages 20 to 64) is projected to decrease from 59% in 2016 to 55% in 2029, placing additional burdens on a workforce shortage.

In addition, the state’s budget has been impacted by slumping economies in its major industries: agriculture and oil production. The COVID-19 pandemic also has placed undue burdens on the state’s economy and its people.

“Assuring North Dakota is a good place to live and age well is a complex problem needing an integrated and collaborative solution,” Strommen said.

The initiative is supported in part by a $1.51 million, three-year grant from Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies.

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