Aging in Place: Dr. Sarah Szanton and the CAPABLE Project

Published: Feb. 5, 2019, 2:11 p.m.

b'In Season 2, we talked about Aging in Place with the founder of HomesRenewed, which focused on ways to make the built environment work for people who wish to remain in their own homes or apartments and avoid moving into a facility if at all possible.

In this episode, we speak with Dr. Sarah Szanton, one of the founders of the CAPABLE Project (https://nursing.jhu.edu/CAPABLE), which takes the problem of aging in place a step further \\u2013 addressing both the physical space and the functional limitations of the resident. When you pay attention to both the house and the body, the results can be amazing.

Resources mentioned in this podcast include:

-The CAPABLE Project: https://nursing.jhu.edu/CAPABLE
-Man\\u2019s Search for Meaning, by Viktor Frankl (originally published in 1946)

About Our Guest:

Sarah L. Szanton, PhD, ANP, FAAN is the Endowed Professor for Health Equity and Social Justice and Director of the Center for Innovative Care in Aging at the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing.

While making house calls to homebound, low-income elderly patients in West Baltimore, Dr. Szanton noticed that her patients\\u2019 environmental challenges were often as pressing as their health challenges. As a result of her observations, she and colleagues at Johns Hopkins University developed a program of research on the role that the environment and functional limitations play in the ability of older adults to \\u201cage in place\\u201d or stay out of a nursing home. The result is the CAPABLE Project - Community Aging in Place\\u2014Advancing Better Living for Elders, which combines handyman services with nursing and occupational therapy to improve mobility, reduce disability, and decrease healthcare costs.'