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Intergenerational shared site

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a brick building
The Intergenerational Wellness Centre at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health's Queen Street in Ontario, Canada (2012)

An intergenerational shared site is a facility where children, youth and older adults participate in ongoing services and/or programming concurrently at the same site, and where participants interact during regularly scheduled planned intergenerational activities, as well as through informal encounters.[1]

Benefits of shared sites include that they enhance quality of life for all participants, improve attitudes about different age groups, provide needed services to the community, increase cost savings and create opportunities to share resources, and attract additional funding sources and acts as positive public relations/marketing tools. Intergenerational shared sites serve and provide care to children, youth and older adults and also act as a mechanism to address of the social implications of an increasingly age-segregated society.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Goyer, A. (2001) "Intergenerational shared site and shared resource programs: current models." Generations United Project SHARE Background Paper. Washington, DC: Generations United.
  2. ^ "Fact sheet: Intergenerational Shared sites" (PDF). Generations United. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26."