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  • The Quality Improvement Program for Missouri's Long - Term Care Facilities (QIPMO) is committed to Missouri's Elderly.

  • The "Aging-in-place" model allows older adults to receive health care in their preferred place of living, eliminating the need for a more restricted living space, such as a nursing home.

  • TigerPlace is a specially designed elder housing project initiated by the MU Sinclair School of Nursing, working to provide elders a better quality of life.

Welcome to AgingMO.com

AgingMO is a centralized online home for the University of Missouri’s Aging in Place (AIP) program and its related projects. Our unique AIP model allows older adults to receive health care in their preferred place of living. As their care needs increase, residents contract for more care in the same setting, eliminating the need for a move to a more restrictive living environment such as a nursing home. This project, which began in 1996, is a multidisciplinary project including MU’s School of Nursing, College of Electrical and Computer Engineering, School of Social Work, Department of Physical Therapy, Department of Management and Informatics, Biostatistics Group, and Department of Family and Community Medicine, along with outside consultants. We have developed this website to assist you by allowing complete and easy access to the many distinctive aspects of our groundbreaking research.

America’s 75 million aging adults soon will face decisions about where and how to live as they age. Current options for long-term care, including nursing homes and assisted-living facilities, are costly and require seniors to move from place to place. University of Missouri researchers have found that a new strategy for long-term care called Aging in Place (AIP) is less expensive and provides better health outcomes. The AIP model provides services and care to meet residents’ increasing needs to avoid relocation to higher levels of care. AIP includes continuous care management, a combination of personalized health services with nursing care coordination. Click here for an AIP information packet.

AgingMO Articles

Journal of Nursing Measurement

The primary aim of this NINR-NIH–funded field test in 407 nursing homes in 3 states was to complete the development of and conduct psychometric testing for the Observable Indicators of Nursing Home Care Quality Instrument (Observable Indicators, OIQ). The development of the OIQ was based on extensive qualitative and iterative quantitative work that described nursing home...

Proceedings of the International Society for Gerontechnology and International Symposium for Automation and Robotics in Construction Conference

The purpose of the study is to investigate whether motion density maps based on passive infrared (PIR) motion sensors and the dis-similarity measure of the density maps, along with relative energy expenditure estimates derived from motion density are sensitive enough to detect changes in mental health over time.

Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Proceedings from the 10th Annual International Conference on Smart Homes and Health Telematics

We present an example of unobtrusive, continuous monitoring in the
home for the purpose of assessing early health changes. Sensors embedded in
the environment capture activity patterns. Changes in the activity patterns are
detected as potential signs of changing health. A simple alert algorithm has
been implemented to generate health alerts to...

Journal of the American Medical Directors Association

A randomized, two-group, repeated-measures design was used to test a two year intervention for improving quality of care and resident outcomes in facilities in “need of improvement”. Intervention group (n=29) received an experimental multilevel intervention designed to help them: 1) use quality-improvement methods, 2) use team and group process for direct-care decision-...

Joint Commission Journal on Quality Improvement

An important area of inquiry in quality measurement when using quality indicators (QIs) lies in determining what thresholds indicate good and poor resident outcomes. In July 1996, a cross-section of 13 clinical care personnel from nursing homes participated on an expert panel for threshold setting of Qls derived from Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessment data. Panel members met...

Nursing Economics

In 1994 12.7% of the population was 65 and over, while 10.6% were 85 and over. Expenditures for nursing homes reached $72.3 billion in 1994 (much of which is tax-supported) accounting for 8.7% of all personal health money spent. Data from the 1993 Missouri Medicaid cost reports for 403 nursing homes were reviewed to determine differences in costs per resident day (PRD) and...