DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igag078 ISSN: 2399-5300

Assessing Home Environmental Hazards for Older Adults Receiving In-Home Supportive Services: The Healthy Homes Assessment Tool (H-HAT)

Steven M Albert, Jemima Ohwobete, Jenn McCartney, Meredith Hughes, Sarah Haig, James Fabisiak, Jonathan Pearlman, Dan Ding, A Everette James, Shannah Gilliam, Pamela Toto

Abstract

Background and Objectives

Home- and community-based services (HCBS) assessments often fail to include environmental health hazards that can be a barrier to aging in place. This study describes the development of a tool assessing two categories of environmental health hazards found in older homes—poor chemical and physical indoor air quality (IAQ) and moisture-related mold conditions—and the evaluation of the feasibility of integrating it into HCBS assessment workflows.

Research Design and Methods

The Healthy Home Assessment Tool (H-HAT) includes resident reports and HCBS care coordinator observations/reports of IAQ and moisture-related mold conditions, conducted in partnership with an area agency on aging. For preliminary pilot validation, H-HAT ratings were assessed relative to consumer-grade IAQ monitoring and mold analysis.

Results

The sample included 41 low-income older adult households (median resident age: 76; 78% female; 31.7% African American). Care coordinators successfully fielded the tool, sharing results via standardized reports and proposing remediation strategies with residents. Mold odor was noted in 23% of residences, and water damage in 48.7%. Relative to current EPA standards, 61.0% had fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations above the recommended limit (9 µg/m³), and 21.9% had radon levels above the action level of 4 pCi/L. PM2.5 was significantly higher in residences with H-HAT reports of smoking and a higher fungal burden in households with visible mold/mildew.

Discussion and Implications

H-HAT is feasible to deliver in partnership with care management agencies. Poor IAQ and moisture/mold conditions are common and may be relevant in designing care plans and improving health outcomes.

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