Wednesday, February 18, 2009

House passes measures regarding missing older adults

The House of Representatives has passed two bills relating to missing older Americans.

H.R.908 Missing Alzheimer’s Disease Patient Alert
Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA) sponsored this legislation that amends the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 to reauthorize the Missing Alzheimer's Disease Patient Alert Program. The bill was received in the Senate, read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

The Missing Alzheimer’s Disease Patient Alert Program directs the Attorney General, through the Bureau of Justice Assistance and in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, to award competitive grants to nonprofit organizations to assist such organizations in paying for the costs of planning, designing, establishing, and operating locally based, proactive programs to protect and locate missing patients with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias and other missing elderly individuals.

The legislation authorizes appropriations of $5 million for each year 2010 through 2016. The funds must be appropriated before the grants will be available.

H.R.632 National Silver Alert Act 2009
The National Silver Alert Act 2009 sponsored by Representative Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) would encourage, enhance, and integrate Silver Alert plans throughout the United States, and authorize grants for the assistance of organizations to find missing adults. The bill was received in the Senate, read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

The legislation directs the Attorney General to: (1) establish a national Silver Alert communications network within the Department of Justice (DOJ) to assist regional and local search efforts for missing seniors; (2) assign a DOJ officer to serve as the Silver Alert Coordinator to coordinate the network with states; and (3) award grants to states for support of Silver Alert plans and the network. The bill defines "missing senior" as any individual who is reported as missing to or by a law enforcement agency and who meets state requirements for designation as a missing senior. It further directs the coordinator to: (1) establish minimum standards for the issuance and dissemination of alerts issued through the network; and (2) make available to states, local governments, law enforcement agencies, and other concerned entities network training and information.

The bill also includes the Kristen's Act Reauthorization of 2009 directing the Attorney General to make competitive grants to public agencies or nonprofit private organizations to: (1) maintain a national resource center and information clearinghouse for missing and unidentified adults; (2) maintain a national, interconnected database to track missing adults endangered due to age, diminished mental capacity, or the circumstances of disappearance, when foul play is suspected or circumstances are unknown; (3) coordinate public and private programs that locate or recover missing adults; (4) provide assistance and training to law enforcement agencies, state and local governments, and other agencies involved with missing adults; (5) provide assistance to families in locating and recovering missing adults; and (6) assist in public notification and victim advocacy related to missing adults.

These bills have been read in the Senate and assigned to committee. More information about these issues will be provided when the Senate takes action.

To read more about these bills go to http://www.thomas.gov/ and search for the bills by number.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Funding available for Social Innovators in Your Communities

Social entrepreneurs John Gardner and Marc Freedman founded Civic Ventures in the late 1990s as a think tank and an incubator, generating ideas and inventing programs to help society achieve the greatest return on experience. Civic Ventures promotes redefining the second half of life as a source of social and individual renewal. Through research, publishing, conferences, and media outreach, Civic Ventures reports on the growth of the experience movement. Through programs and consulting, Civic Ventures brings together older adults with a passion for service and helps stimulate opportunities for using their talents to advance the greater good helping America realize an experience dividend.

Civic Ventures awards the Purpose Prize and applications are currently being accepted. The Purpose Prize® provides five awards of $100,000 each to people over 60 who are taking on society’s biggest challenges. It’s for those with the passion and experience to discover new opportunities, create new programs, and make lasting change. The deadline for applications is March 5, 2009. Read more about it at http://www.purposeprize.org/

GAO Report Regarding Traumatic Brain Injury and the VA

Government Accountability Office Report
Released January 29, 2009

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: Better DOD and VA Oversight Can Help Ensure More Accurate, Consistent, and Timely Decisions for the Traumatic Injury Insurance Program

In 2005, Congress created a traumatic injury insurance benefit program, known as TSGLI, to help service members with traumatic brain injury and other serious injuries with the financial burdens that they and their families face. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) administers the program, in collaboration with the Department of Defense (DOD), while the branches of service are responsible for deciding service members’ claims. GAO examined (1) the TSGLI approval rate for traumatic brain injury claimants, and whether DOD and VA have assurance that claims are processed accurately, consistently, and in a timely manner and (2) any challenges service members with traumatic brain injury may have faced in accessing TSGLI benefits, and the extent to which DOD and VA have taken steps to address such challenges. GAO analyzed program data and interviewed DOD and VA officials, service members, and medical professionals.

What GAO Recommends
GAO recommends that DOD and VA (1) implement a quality assurance review process to help ensure that decisions are accurate and consistent within and across the services and (2) take steps to ensure the data required to assess the approval rate for traumatic brain injury and timeliness of the claims process are reliable and comprehensive. DOD and VA generally agreed with our recommendations.
To view the full report visit http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09108.pdf

Kennedy Statement on the Role of States in Keeping Americans Healthy

EXCERPTS FROM STATEMENT BY SENATOR EDWARD M. KENNEDY ON THE ROLE OF STATES IN KEEPING AMERICANS HEALTHY
United States Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Hearing

At a January hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA) provided a statement in which he noted that the United States spends two trillion dollars a year on care, yet one in two Americans suffer from chronic diseases that decrease quality of life and increase health costs. Estimates indicate that close to 200 million Americans alive today will have a chronic illness, and that one in four dollars will soon be spent on health care.

He noted that many factors lead to chronic disease, but much of the health care expenditures associated with these conditions are preventable. “For every dollar spent on initiatives to increase physical activity, improve nutrition and prevent smoking, a total of $5.60 can be saved in health costs” his statement reported. Even though a great deal is known about the power of prevention, less than five percent of all health expenditures are spent on prevention.

The statement noted that economic, social and physical issues often make it difficult for people to make healthy choices. In response, states are exploring innovative prevention initiatives to combat the effects of chronic illness on their residents. In particular he highlighted the Massachusetts Office of Health and Human Services initiative “Mass In Motion,” a multi-faceted program that includes promoting healthy eating and physical activity, grants to cities and towns to make wellness initiatives a priority, and a new website to give residents advice on how to make healthy eating and physical activity part of their daily lives.

He went on to say that the power of prevention is an essential element of health reform and that prevention must be one of the principal pillars of overall health reform.