STATE COLLEGE — Skills of Central PA — one of the region’s largest human services agencies supporting people with intellectual and developmental disabilities — recently received a gold award for health leadership excellence from Mainstay, Inc., creator of the My25 wellness program.
Skills received the award based on its commitment to enhanced nutrition, preventive health and clinical health improvements in the people it supports including body mass index, hemoglobin A1c (a measure of average blood sugar level over several months), medication usage/dosage and acute care visits. The program, used in many of Skills’ community-based homes throughout the region, helps the organization support people with disabilities that have health issues such as diabetes, over- or under-weight, gastroesophageal reflux disease, lactose intolerance, allergies, gluten-free needs, difficulty swallowing and more.
“We are honored to receive this recognition,” said Rebecca Aungst, president and CEO of Skills of Central PA. “As a person-centered organization, everyone at Skills is dedicated to empowering the people we support so they can accomplish the goals that are important to them. The My25 program is built on the same philosophy, which makes it a powerful tool for helping people accomplish their health, wellness and nutrition goals. The outcomes achieved by the people we support illustrate the power of a person-centered approach. Skills of Central PA is pleased to be a health and wellness advocate for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.”
Sylvia Landy Vail, chief operating officer of Mainstay, Inc. agrees.
“Mainstay’s My25 team is incredibly pleased to recognize Skills of Central PA for its dedication to the health and wellness of the people they support,” she said. “By incorporating the My25 program and its person-centered focus on nutrition into its community-based homes, Skills is among the nation’s most proactive human services providers. Changing longstanding habits and routines is hard work when it comes to eating the right foods in the right amounts, and it requires unique commitment and follow through on the part of the organization as a whole, a cultural shift that can only be spurred by strong leadership. As an organization uniquely accomplishing substantial clinical and social health outcomes among people with intellectual and developmental disabilities — something the mainstream struggles with mightily — Skills of Central PA deserves this recognition for its innovation and materially benefitting constituents, the broader community and society as a whole.”