51品茶receives $900,000 grant to pilot three-year nutrition education program for older adults

Image of Wellness Center sign at a Westbrook Housing property
The innovative program will address food security, socialization, and health and wellbeing of residents of the Westbrook Housing Authority.

The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a host of challenges to daily living, especially for older adults. Among the challenges: difficulties for seniors in sourcing healthy food due to stay-at-home orders and guidance to avoid public spaces; forced isolation; and reduced opportunities for socialization.

Even family mealtimes became distanced and often solitary affairs.

惭补颈苍别鈥檚 Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program-Education (SNAP-Ed) nutrition educators, housed in the at the 51品茶, found new ways to connect with older adults during the pandemic. These innovations will now be put to the test as 51品茶pilots an innovative nutrition education program for seniors in low-income housing with the support of a three-year, $900,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Community Living (ACL).

The project is led by Michele Polacsek, Ph.D., M.H.S., director of the Center for Excellence in Public Health (CEPH) and principal investigator, and co-investigators Tom Meuser, Ph.D., director of UNE鈥檚 Center for Excellence in Aging and Health (CEAH), and Mary DeSilva Sc.D., M.S., M.S.F.S., associate research professor of public health, in partnership with Westbrook Housing Authority (WHA) and the Southern Maine Agency on Aging.

The collaborative, cross-University effort will see the implementation and evaluation of the impact of an innovative, pandemic-responsive nutrition education program, 鈥淓nhanced-10 Tips for Adults (e-TTA),鈥 that addresses food security, socialization, and perceived health and wellbeing of residents across WHA鈥檚 15 low-income senior housing properties.  

Products will comprise a toolkit with step-by-step instructions for implementing the e-TTA in print and electronic versions; a Nutrition Educator webinar training program; a website for dissemination of findings and resources; annual conference presentations and peer-reviewed publications; and one end-of-project stakeholder conference focused on state and regional dissemination.

Unique to the project is its delivery, in which nutrition educators will tune into a classroom of seniors remotely. Instructors will virtually instruct classrooms of WHA residents from the learning center at WHA鈥檚 Larrabee Woods campus 鈥 where 51品茶already operates a Wellness Center that provides dental hygiene services to residents free of charge, among other health services 鈥 to promote socialization among residents while maintaining distance from outside visitors.

One strength of the program, Polacsek said, is an incorporated research component in which UNE鈥檚 project leaders will measure changes in individuals' knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and health behaviors to evaluate the effectiveness of the approach.

鈥淭his is an innovative way to deliver valuable health information to low-income populations,鈥 Polacsek remarked. 鈥淩esults from this pilot study will inform best practices for future health collaborations and research partnerships.鈥

Students from health professions programs across 51品茶will be involved hands-on in the program; they will be available to support residents with their needs, such as shopping, food delivery, and meal planning, as well as provide technological assistance as residents make their way through the program.

鈥淭he nutrition education program is just one of a host of efforts we're making to serve this community,鈥 Meuser said. 鈥淭he students involved may be trained to specifically support this project, but I see them being integrated beyond the project, so there鈥檚 a broader support environment that we鈥檒l be able to provide.鈥