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Includes a Live Web Event on 04/28/2026 at 12:00 PM (EDT)
This webinar highlights the latest research on palliative and end-of-life care published in the joint special issue of the Medical/Social Sciences of The Journals of Gerontology. Special issue editors, Raya E. Kheirbek and Markus H. Schafer as moderators, select authors will present their study findings.
Palliative and end-of-life (PEOL) care is often treated as a clinical outcome, yet in practice, it depends on complex interactions among patients, families, clinicians, and health systems. This webinar draws on an interdisciplinary, joint special issue of the Medical Sciences and the Social Sciences sections of The Journals of Gerontology that explores how these relationships shape care at the end of life.
Articles in the special issue examine advance care planning, decision-making in dementia care, the role of family involvement, cross-national differences in treatment preferences near the end of life, and potential barriers to access (e.g., racial inequality, kinlessness, cultural expectations, national policy frameworks).
By bringing together perspectives from medicine, sociology, and gerontology, the webinar aims to highlight ways interdisciplinary collaboration can help close the gap between research evidence and everyday clinical practice. This event is intended for clinicians, social scientists, policymakers, and scholars working in aging and gerontology who are interested in improving PEOL care in an aging society.
The special issue editors, Raya E. Kheirbek, MD, MPH, FGSA, and Markus H. Schafer, PhD, FGSA, will serve as moderators and introduce each of the featured speakers. The researchers will present their work and will be available for questions.
$i++ ?>Raya E. Kheirbek, MD, MPH (Moderator)
Professor, Division Head
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Dr. Raya Kheirbek is a Professor of Medicine and the inaugural Division Head of Gerontology, Geriatrics, and Palliative Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. She is board-certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatric Medicine, and Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Her work centers on improving the quality of care for older adults living with serious and advanced illnesses—an approach that aligns perfectly with the growing need for integrated geriatric and palliative care in our aging population. Dr. Kheirbek’s research includes large-scale studies on the oldest old, notably the world’s largest cohort of male centenarians, which has provided valuable insights into longevity and end-of-life care needs. Beyond research, she is deeply committed to education as Program Director of the Geriatric Fellowship at UMD, where she trains the next generation in person-centered, compassionate care. She is also a strong advocate for vulnerable populations, advancing social justice through policy, writing, and public engagement.
$i++ ?>Markus Schafer, PhD (Moderator)
Professor of Sociology
Baylor University
Markus Schafer is currently Professor of Sociology and Graduate Program Director at Baylor University. He earned his PhD in Sociology and Gerontology from Purdue University in 2011. His research investigates the intersections of health and aging, specifically the long-term consequences of childhood adversity and how social networks evolve to shape physical, mental, and cognitive health in later life. Schafer’s work has been supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Canada) and the Ontario Early Researcher Award program. He currently serves as Deputy Editor of the Journals of Gerontology: Social Sciences and is a co-editor of the forthcoming Handbook of the Sociology of Aging, 2nd Ed. (Springer).
$i++ ?>Yaeji Kim-Knauss, PhD
Senior Researcher
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
Yaeji Kim-Knauss received a master’s degree in social welfare from Seoul National University, South Korea, and a PhD in psychogerontology from Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany. She is currently working as a senior researcher at the Institute of Psychogerontology at the Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany. Her research focuses on aging preparation, decision making, and end-of-life.
$i++ ?>Aija Logren, DSocSci
University Lecturer
University of Eastern Finland
Aija Logren is a social psychologist specializing in interaction research, discursive psychology and conversation analysis. Her work examines how participation, morality, emotion, knowledge and power are negotiated in social and health care encounters. Logren has contributed to research on group counselling, health communication, shared decision making and professional–client interaction, with publications spanning topics such as hope work, group discussions, and the management of stance. She teaches interaction skills particularly for social work and medical students. She is recognized for her expertise in qualitative methods and the analysis of social interaction. Logren earned her doctorate in social sciences in 2019, and has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Tampere University and the University of Helsinki in projects exploring information literacy, affect and decision making in health care encounters. She is now university lecturer at the University of Eastern Finland, and currently studies negotiations considering transition from curative to palliative care.
$i++ ?>Yaolin Pei, PhD
Assistant Professor
The University of Texas at Austin
Yaolin Pei, PhD is a gerontologist who used both qualitative and quantitative methods to study how social psychological factors affect end-of-life decision-making and end-of-life outcomes. She develops culturally adapted educational tools and interventions that facilitate end-of-life decision making and aims to improve end-of-life care outcomes.
$i++ ?>Jacqueline Yuen, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor
The University of Hong Kong
Professor Jacqueline Yuen is a geriatrician, palliative care physician, and Clinical Assistant Professor at the School of Clinical Medicine and School of Public Health, The University of Hong Kong (HKU). Her research focuses on improving end-of-life care for people with advanced dementia and enhancing serious illness communication with older adults with life-limiting conditions. Prof. Yuen was an Assistant Professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York from 2012-2016. She served as a Clinical Lecturer at the Chinese University of Hong Kong from 2017 to 2018, during which she received the University Education Award in recognition of her contributions to medical education. In 2025, she received the HKU Faculty Teaching Medal. She currently serves on the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine Professionalism and Ethics Committee, and the Councils of the Hong Kong Geriatrics Society and the Hong Kong Association of Gerontology.
Joint Special Issue: Palliative and End-of-Life Care in Aging, Joint Special Issue of Medical Sciences and Social Sciences Sections, The Journals of Gerontology
Guest Editors: Raya E. Kheirbek, MD, MPH, FGSA, and Markus H. Schafer, PhD, FGSA
Introductory Editorial: Palliative and End-of-Life Care as Fragile Collective Accomplishment: Social and Medical Perspectives
Markus H. Schafer, PhD, FGSA and Raya E. Kheirbek, MD, MPH, FGSAThe final year for community-dwelling older adults with dementia in an Asian setting: Admissions, interventions, and caregiver burden
Ellie B. Andres, DrPH, Chetna Malhotra, MD, & PISCES Study GroupCommunicating palliative hope in late-stage dementia: thematic analysis of hope work in care plan meetings with nursing home residents’ families
Jenny Paananen, PhD & Aija Logren, DSocSciAdvance care planning with people living with dementia: ethical considerations of physicians in the United States and the Netherlands
Jingyuan Xu, MSc, David R Mehr, MD, MS, Marieke Perry, MD, PhD, K. Taylor Bosworth, BS, Kate McGough, BS, Wilco P. Achterberg, MD, PhD, Hanneke Smaling, PhD, & Jenny T. van der Steen, PhDEnd-of-life care in hospitalized patients with dementia
Xin Wen Ong, MD, David G. Le Couteur, MD, PhD, Louise M. Waite, MD, PhD, & Janani Thillainadesan, MD, PhDComparison of survival and pneumonia risk in advanced dementia patients on nasogastric tube feeding versus careful hand feeding
Jacqueline K. Yuen, MD, Rachelle Bernacki, MD, Felix H. W. Chan, MBBS, Tuen-Ching Chan, MBBS, MPH, MD, David T. Y. Chow, MSc, Yat-Fung Shea, MBBS, Betty L. H. Ng, MD, Karen M K Chan, PhD, Xue Li, PhD, Qi-Man Shi, MPH, MD, & James K. H. Luk, MBBS, MScSocial relationships and end-of-life quality among older adults in the United States: the impacts of marital, kinship, and network ties
Kafayat Mahmoud, PhD & Deborah Carr, PhDPain prevalence and pain management at the end of life: regional and urban-rural differences from a national-representative survey of Chinese older adults
Yaolin Pei, PhD, Xiang Qi, PhD, Zexi Zhou, MS, Yifan Lou, PhD, LMSW, Jing Wang, PhD, Yang Li, PhD, & Bei Wu, PhDKinlessness and end-of-life care quality: does race and ethnicity matter?
Yaolin Pei, PhD, Zexi Zhou, MS, Shaoqing Ge, PhD, Xiang Qi, PhD, Kaipeng Wang, PhD, Weiyu Mao, PhD, & Bei Wu, PhDRacial disparities in palliative care among hospitalized older adults with traumatic brain injury
Jennifer S Albrecht, PhD, Justin Price, MD, Chih Chun Tung, MS, & Raya Elfadel Kheirbek, MD, FGSABlack and White older adults’ end-of-life experiences: does hospice use mitigate racial disparities?
Clifford Ross, PhD, Brina Ratangee, BA, Emily Schuler, BA, Zheng Lian, BS, Benmun Damul, BS, Deborah Carr, PhD, & Lucie Kalousová, PhDMemento Mori? Differences in translating perceived engagement into end-of-life preparatory activities in Germany and South Korea
Yaeji Kim-Knauss, PhD, Yumi Shin, PhD, Jung-Hwa Ha, PhD, & Frieder R Lang, PhDDeveloping the Right for You? Intervention to improve engagement in community-based palliative care: a feasibility study and pilot test
Elizabeth Luth, PhD, Denalee O’Malley, PhD, Carlin Brickner, DrPH, Ruiqi Xue, MS, & Kathryn H. Bowles, PhD-
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Includes a Live Web Event on 04/23/2026 at 9:00 AM (EDT)
The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), in collaboration with the European Association for the Study of Obesity (EASO), will host a webinar on the 2026 EASO position paper on obesity management in older adults. Experts, including Dr. John Batsis and Professors Volkan Yumuk and Lorenzo Donini, will discuss the limitations of BMI in diagnosing obesity in older populations and emphasize the importance of multidimensional assessment and multimodal management to prioritize muscle mass, mobility, and independence in treatment.
The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), in collaboration with the European Association for the Study of Obesity (EASO), will present a webinar detailing the 2026 EASO position paper on obesity management in older adults.
During the webinar, international obesity experts will provide a comprehensive review of the updated framework for treating patients aged 65 and older. Panelists include Dr. John Batsis, GSA member and Obesity Interest Group Co-convenor; Professor Volkan Yumuk, EASO president; and Professor Lorenzo M. Donini, co-chair of EASO Sarcopenic Obesity and Obesity in Older Adults Working Group who led the development of the position statement.
The expert faculty will discuss why body mass index (BMI) alone is an insufficient diagnostic tool for older populations, as it can mask sarcopenic obesity, and they will highlight a variety of aspects of multidimensional assessment of an older adult with obesity. Building on the importance of prioritizing the preservation of muscle mass, mobility, and independence over simple numbers on a scale, they will examine key facets of multimodal interprofessional management of older adults with obesity.
$i++ ?>John Batsis, MD
Associate Professor
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
John A. Batsis, MD, FACP, AGSF, FGSA, FTOS, is an Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in Geriatric Medicine and Nutrition. Dr. Batsis is a geriatrician and clinician researcher who is board certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics, and Obesity Medicine. He provides care in the outpatient and nursing home setting to older adults with obesity, multimorbidity, and frailty. His research focuses on the interplay between fat and muscle in older adults mongst older adults with a goal of improving physical function during weight loss. He also focuses on methods relevant to understanding the heterogeneity of aging. Dr. Batsis is funded by the National Institutes of Health having published over 240 papers. He is co-Chair of the Obesity Section of the Gerontological Society of America and a member of international consortiums including the Global Leadership Initiative for Sarcopenia and the Sarcopenic Obesity Global Leadership Initiative.
$i++ ?>Volkan Demirhan Yumuk, MD, FACP, FACE
Professor of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes, Istanbul University-Cerrahpaşa, Cerrahpaşa Medical Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey
President, European Association for the Study of Obesity
$i++ ?>Lorenzo M. Donini, MD
Professor, Sapienza University of Rome, Experimental Medicine Department
Co-Chair, EASO Sarcopenic Obesity and Obesity in Older Adults Working Group
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Includes a Live Web Event on 04/17/2026 at 12:00 PM (EDT)
This virtual program is designed to share insights, practical guidance, and real-world experiences to support strong and sustainable Student Chapters.
Join us for an engaging virtual gathering featuring a panel of GSA Student Officers, moderated by Faculty Advisor Dr. Keith Kleszynski, Assistant Professor of Research, Reynolds Section of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, University of Oklahoma.
Topics will include:
- Best practices and strategies
- Navigating challenges and celebrating accomplishments
- Planning impactful chapter events
- Funding insights and support
This gathering will also provide time to connect with fellow Student Chapter members from around the world. GSA Student Chapters play a crucial role in advancing students’ professional development in education, research, advocacy, policy, and aging-related sciences.
$i++ ?>Keith Kleszynski, PhD (Moderator)
Assistant Professor of Research
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences
Keith Kleszynski, PhD is an Assistant Professor of Research in the Section of Geriatric Medicine in the OUHSC Department of Medicine. Keith is also the Associate Director of the Oklahoma Healthy Aging Initiative. Keith holds a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from the University of Oklahoma. He has 15 years of research experience, including conducting research with older Oklahoman adults, American Indian tribes, undocumented Latino immigrants in the U.S., drug court enrollees, and former undocumented Latino immigrants who have returned to Mexico and Latin America. His specialties and research interests involve qualitative research methodologies, population health disparities, geriatric health issues, aging issues, active living, identity, and migration.
$i++ ?>Madison (Maddie) Enos
GSA Student Chapter President
University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine
Madison Enos is a first-year osteopathic medical student at the University of New England and President of her GSA Student Chapter, with a strong interest in advocating for older adults in healthcare.
$i++ ?>Grace Savard
GSA Student Chapter President
University of Minnesota
Grace Savard is a dual-degree Master of Public Policy and Master of Public Health student at the University of Minnesota. She is focused on advancing healthy aging through policy, research, and population health.
$i++ ?>Layla Katharine Santana
GSA Student Chapter President
University of South Florida
Layla Katharine Santana is a PhD student in Aging Studies at the University of South Florida and an occupational therapist whose research explores digital engagement, cognition, and innovative approaches to healthy aging.
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Includes a Live Web Event on 04/13/2026 at 12:00 PM (EDT)
This webinar celebrates the National Institute on Aging’s half century of robust support for research on aging and will summarize select articles from The Gerontologist’s special collection commemorating the remarkable contributions, milestones, and initiatives that have formed significant areas of scholarship on aging and older people.
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the National Institute on Aging (NIA), this webinar will highlight select articles from The Gerontologist’s special collection commemorating the remarkable contributions, milestones, and initiatives that have formed significant areas of scholarship and demonstrate NIA’s robust support . Unlike other institutes within the National Institutes of Health, NIA’s focus is not on a single disease or organ but on the multidisciplinary process of aging itself. The NIA has thus established a research agenda emphasizing the need for a transdisciplinary lifespan and life-course approach to understanding how and why disease processes, cognition, and health services intersect with aging. Each presentation will summarize an area or initiative that NIA has supported, which has significantly advanced the science of aging. Including survey data infrastructure on aging; the National Institute on Aging Health Disparities Research Framework; the Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research; and the evolution of dementia caregiving research.
Read the collection here: https://academic.oup.com/geron...
$i++ ?>Joseph E. Gaugler, PhD, FGSA (Moderator)
Editor-in-Chief, The Gerontologist | University of Minnesota School of Public Health
RLK Chair in LTC & Aging; Distinguished McKnight University Professor, Center for Healthy Aging and Innovation, University of Minnesota
Joe Gaugler is the Robert L. Kane Endowed Chair in Long-Term Care & Aging in the School of Public Health and a Distinguished McKnight University Professor at the University of Minnesota. He is the Director of the Center for Healthy Aging and Innovation, Director of the CDC-funded BOLD Public Health Center of Excellence on Dementia Caregiving, Director of the National Institute on Aging-funded EMBRACE AD/ADRD Roybal and State Alzheimer's Research Support Centers, and Editor-in-Chief of The Gerontologist. His research focuses on dementia care innovation.
$i++ ?>Emily Agree, PhD, MA
Professor of Sociology
Johns Hopkins University
Emily M. Agree, PhD, is a Research Professor in the Department of Sociology and the Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health at Johns Hopkins University and Associate Director of the Hopkins Population Center. Her research focuses on aging, disability, long-term care, family relationships in later life, and the social and demographic factors shaping health and well-being among older adults. Dr. Agree has played a key role in national aging research, including serving on the steering committee for the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), a major longitudinal study examining disability and functioning in later life. Her work also explores assistive technologies, caregiving, and how demographic changes affect family support systems for older adults. She has served on the Board of Directors of the Population Association of America and on the editorial boards of several leading journals, including Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences and Research on Aging. Dr. Agree earned her PhD in sociology from Duke University and her MA in demography from Georgetown University. She is also a Fellow of The Gerontological Society of America.
$i++ ?>Spero Manson, MS, PhD
Distinguished Professor & Director
Centers for American Indian & Alaska Native Health
Spero M. Manson, Ph.D. (Little Shell Chippewa) is Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Psychiatry, occupies the Colorado Trust Chair in American Indian Health, and directs the Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health in the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Denver’s Anschutz Medical Center. His programs include 10 national centers, which pursue research, program development, training, and collaboration with 200 Native communities. Dr. Manson has acquired >$260 million in sponsored research to support this work, and published 300 articles on the assessment, epidemiology, treatment, and prevention of physical, alcohol, drug, as well as mental health problems over the developmental life span of Native people. He has received over 30 national from the NIH, CDC, APHA, AAMC, IHS, numerous professional organizations, and the National Academy of Medicine. He is widely acknowledged as one of the nation’s leading authorities regarding Native health.
$i++ ?>Marcia Ory, PhD, MPH
Regents and Distinguished Professor
Texas A&M School of Public Health
Marcia G. Ory, PhD, MPH is a Regents and Distinguished Professor and Center for Community Health and Aging Core Faculty at the Texas A&M School of Public Health in the USA. Her research focuses on factors associated with healthy aging and social, behavioral, environmental, and technological solutions for promoting health and well-being across the life course in diverse populations and settings. Committed to translating research to practice and ensuring that all populations can age well, she is a founding member of the National Consortium on RE-AIM Planning and Evaluation Framework (www.re-aim-org). Additionally, she is a co-Lead of the Texas A&M Dementia and Alzheimer’s Research Initiative and engages in research to scale and sustain evidence-based programs to reduce dementia caregiving burdens. Among her many accolades, she’s especially proud to be a Fellow of The Gerontological Society of America.
$i++ ?>Lauren J. Parker, PhD, MPH
Associate Scientist
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Dr. Lauren J. Parker, PhD, MPH, is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Her research advances dementia care and support for all families, with a focus on communities who experience higher prevalence and greater risk of dementia. She develops and implements culturally tailored, community-based interventions to ensure that services and resources reach those most in need, with the goal of achieving parity in dementia care. Dr. Parker is Principal Investigator of an NIA-funded K01 study examining biological and psychosocial stress pathways among caregivers and serves as Co-Investigator with the State Alzheimer’s Research Support Center (StARS) and the Implementation Core of the NIA-funded IMPACT Collaboratory. A national leader in dementia caregiving science, Dr. Parker works at the intersection of research, policy, and practice to strengthen support for people living with dementia and their caregivers.
$i++ ?>Sidney Stahl, PhD
Retired, Chief, Behavioral Processes Branch, National Institute on Aging
Division of Behavioral and Social Research, National Institutes of Health
Dr. Sidney M. Stahl served as the Chief of the Individual Behavioral Processes Branch at the National Institute on Aging (NIA), National Institutes of Health (NIH) from 1996 until retiring in 2012. He promoted diversity in aging research by creating the Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research (RCMAR) program and initiating NIA’s research programs on elder abuse. After retiring, he served as elder abuse research consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Administration for Community Living/Administration on Aging. He helped implement part of the Affordable Care Act creating the Cabinet-level Elder Justice Coordinating Council. The Gerontological Society of America (GSA) chose Dr. Stahl as the 2012 recipient of the Donald P. Kent Award. Prior to his career at NIH, he was a professor of medical sociology and social gerontology at Purdue University for over 20 years.
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Includes a Live Web Event on 04/10/2026 at 1:00 PM (EDT)
Discover how climate change intersects with health equity in this timely webinar. Dr. Baumbusch and Dr. Zuelsdorff explore how environmental stressors impact older adults and share practical steps to mitigate these effects—offering critical insights for researchers, practitioners, and anyone committed to promoting healthier, more equitable aging.
Discover how climate change intersects with health equity in this timely webinar. Dr. Baumbusch and Dr. Zuelsdorff explore how environmental stressors impact older adults and share practical steps to mitigate these effects—offering critical insights for researchers, practitioners, and anyone committed to promoting healthier, more equitable aging.
$i++ ?>Laura Block, PhD, RN (Moderator)
Postdoctoral Fellow
University of Utah College of Nursing
Dr. Block is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Utah College of Nursing, where her research focuses on improving care for nursing home residents, particularly those living with dementia and experiencing unmet palliative and behavioral health needs. Her work is grounded in her experience as a long-term care nurse, where she observed the complex biopsychosocial challenges residents and families face at the end of life. She uses mixed methods approaches, combining large-scale data analysis with qualitative inquiry to identify patterns in resident symptoms and inform strategies to improve care delivery. Her current research examines indicators of palliative care need and seeks to develop resident- and family-centered interventions that integrate palliative and behavioral health perspectives to improve symptom management at the end of life, supported by funding from the National Institute on Aging and institutional awards.
$i++ ?>Pamela Cacchione, PhD CRNP, BC, FGSA, FAAN (Moderator)
Professor of Geropsychiatric Nursing
University of Pennsylvania
Dr. Cacchione is the Ralston House Term Chair in Gerontological Nursing, Professor of Geropsychiatric Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, and Nurse Scientist at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. She is a Gerontological Nurse Practitioner who has practiced for over 30 years across the care continuum. She is a nurse innovator. Her research focuses on social robotics for older adults. She is the CEO and Founder of AgingSense, a startup technology company to improve the lives of older adults. Dr Cacchione received her BSN from Villanova University, MSN from Marymount University, and PhD from Saint Louis University. She completed postdoctoral training at the University of Iowa. Dr. Cacchione has over 100 publications and is the Past Editor in Chief of Clinical Nursing Research and International Journal. Dr. Cacchione is a Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America and the American Academy of Nursing.
$i++ ?>Jennifer Baumbusch, RN, PhD (Moderator)
Professor
University of British Columbia
Jennifer Baumbusch, RN, PhD, FAAN, FCAN is a Professor at the University of British Columbia’s School of Nursing and former CIHR Chair in Sex and Gender Science (2020 - 2024). Her expertise is in family caregiving, qualitative research, and knowledge translation. Jennifer is an Associate Editor with the International Journal of Older People Nursing and Co-Editor: Qualitative Research with The Gerontologist. She leads a research program examining health equity in the context of climate change, with a focus on older adults, people with lifelong disabilities, and family caregivers. Learn more about Jennifer’s research here: https://climateresilience.nurs...
$i++ ?>Megan Zuelsdorff, PhD
Assistant Professor
University of Wisconsin - Madison
Dr. Zuelsdorff is an epidemiologist studying social-to-biological pathways that shape cognitive health and health disparities in older populations. Primary goals of her research program include identifying (1) community-salient dementia risk factors, as well as (2) personal, community, and policy-based resources that promote successful aging, delay impairment, and reduce burden for families and communities.
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Recorded On: 03/18/2026
Social Research, Policy, and Practice (SRPP) Officers have a candid discussion with the chair of the GSA Publications and Products committee on the SRPP review and acceptance process, how the call for proposals was developed, and provide some insight into GSA 2027 Annual Scientific Meeting.
Join Social Research, Policy, and Practice (SRPP) Officers who will discuss the GSA 2026 Annual Scientific Meeting Call for Abstracts. The first 30 minutes will consist of a candid discussion with the chair of the GSA Publications and Products committee on the SRPP review and acceptance process, how the call for proposals was developed, and provide some insight into how the process will work for GSA 2027 Annual Scientific Meeting.
$i++ ?>Howard B. Degenholtz, PhD, FGSA
Professor
University of Pittsburgh
A national leader in gerontology, Howard Degenholtz specializes in long-term services and supports and home- and community-based services. He developed self-reported quality-of-life measures for nursing home residents and co-authored a seminal paper on the benefits of the Green House model. His research has shown that older adults using consumer-directed personal care are not at increased risk of hospitalization, and he led a randomized trial demonstrating improved quality of life through tailored, individualized care planning. He has also studied end-of-life care in community and nursing home settings, examining advance directives and racial and ethnic disparities, with findings showing that older adults with advance care plans are less likely to experience terminal hospitalization. In organ and tissue donation, he developed and tested approaches to incorporate donor designation into primary care and implemented web-based training in driver’s license centers through randomized trials. He also hosts and produces The Gerontologist Podcast, published by the Gerontological Society of America and available on major podcast platforms.
$i++ ?>Laura Haynes, PhD
Professor
UConn Health
Dr. Haynes is a professor in the UConn Center on Aging at UConn Health. She has been working in aging and gerontology for over 30 years and her primary focus lies in understanding how the aging process influences the immune system’s ability to respond to infections and vaccinations. This area of study is crucial, given the increased susceptibility of older individuals to infectious diseases and the importance of vaccination in mitigating these risks.
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Recorded On: 03/09/2026
Meet the 2026 ESPO Officers and learn more about their roles and plans for ESPO. If you are considering applying to run to serve as the 2027 ESPO Vice Chair-Elect or might be interested in serving as a Section Officer in the future, this session will be especially informative.
Meet the 2026 ESPO Officers and learn more about their roles and plans for ESPO. This is a great opportunity for ESPO members to learn more about ESPO and the work of ESPO leaders. If you are considering applying to run to serve as the 2027 ESPO Vice Chair-Elect or might be interested in serving as a Section Officer in the future, this session will be especially informative. All Student and Early Career GSA Members are automatically part of ESPO.
$i++ ?>Katherine Britt, PhD, MSN, BSN
ESPO Vice Chair
Assistant Professor, University of Iowa
Dr. Kat Britt is an Assistant Professor in Gerontological Nursing at the University of Iowa College of Nursing, a 2024 Butler Williams Scholar, a 2021-2023 Psychology/Mental Health Jonas Scholar, a Geriatric Nursing editorial board member, and serves as the GSA ESPO Vice-Chair Elect and as a Board Member of her local Iowa Chapter Alzheimer’s Association. She completed a T32 postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, obtained her PhD from The University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing, and her Master’s in informatics from The University of Texas at Tyler. Her research focuses on protective lifestyle factors and cognitive care planning to inform nonpharmacological interventions for persons living with dementia, mild cognitive impairment, and their care partners to slow decline.
$i++ ?>Rita Xiaochen Hu, PhD
ESPO Past Chair
Provost's Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Chicago
Rita X. Hu is a developmental scientist and social worker. She had experiences developing and evaluating culturally responsive services for older immigrant clients of Meals on Wheels and interventions to reduce social isolation among homebound older adults. Dr. Hu received her PhD in Social Work and Developmental Psychology from the University of Michigan and her B.A. in Social Welfare and Psychology from the University of California, Berkeley.
$i++ ?>Sohyun Kim, PhD
Assistant Professor, University of Texas at Arlington
ESPO Chair
Sohyun Kim, PhD, is an Assistant Professor at the University of Texas at Arlington, where she began her tenure-track appointment in 2023. She earned her Ph.D. in Nursing from the University of Iowa in 2022. Her research focuses on leveraging technology-based interventions—including video chat, wearable devices, virtual reality, and home monitoring—to enhance the quality of life for persons living with dementia and the family and professional caregivers who support them. Her current research projects include the *Video Family Visit Intervention for Emotional Well-being (VIEW)* program, which provides individualized weekly video family visits to persons living with dementia and their family members in long-term services and supports and home care settings. She also leads *Virtual Reality Communication Training Optimizing Real-world Interactions (VICTORI)*, an initiative that uses AI-driven simulation to train and empower caregivers to improve communication with persons living with dementia.
$i++ ?>Minzhi Ye, PhD
Assistant Professor, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
ESPO Vice Chair-Elect
Dr. Minzhi Ye, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, a Hispanic-Serving Institution located in the Texas border region. Trained as a sociologist, Dr. Ye’s research focuses on aging, health equity, and the social and structural determinants of well-being among older adults and families, with particular attention to resource-limited communities. Her work examines how digital environments, access barriers, caregiving dynamics, and institutional responses shape health, financial security, and independence in later life. She has published extensively in leading journals on aging and health in the U.S. and internationally.
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Recorded On: 03/02/2026
Ever wondered how your major connects to real-world issues—and real careers? Join us for an interactive panel designed to help students see how fields like biology, psychology, sociology, public health, education, nursing, social work, policy, technology, business, and beyond intersect with gerontology and aging research.
Ever wondered how your major connects to real-world issues—and real careers? Join us for an interactive panel designed to help students see how fields like biology, psychology, sociology, public health, education, nursing, social work, policy, technology, business, and beyond intersect with gerontology and aging research.
Our panelists—faculty, researchers, and professionals—will share how their diverse academic backgrounds led them to meaningful work in aging, health, and community research.You’ll gain insight into:
- How your major fits into the interdisciplinary study of aging
- Career pathways and research opportunities in gerontology
- Why aging research needs voices from all disciplines
Whether you’re already interested in aging or just curious about how your major can make an impact, this webinar will help you connect the dots between your coursework and major, and future opportunities.
Open to undergraduate and graduate students.
Come curious. Leave inspired.
$i++ ?>Tamara Baker, PHD, FGSA (Moderator)
Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina School of Medicine
GSA Board of Directors President, Gerontological Society of America
Tamara Baker, PhD, FGSA, is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry in the School of Medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is an appointed member of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Geriatrics and Gerontology Advisory Committee, the National Institutes of Health Interagency Pain Research Coordinating Committee, and Editor-in-Chief of Ethnicity & Health. Among Dr. Baker’s activities with the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), she is a former GSA Secretary, served as Chair of the GSA Committee on Minority Issues in Gerontology, founder and co-convener of GSA’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities Collaborative Interest Group, former Chair of the Behavioral and Social Sciences Section, and is the GSA Board of Directors Vice President Elect. Her background in gerontology, psychology, and biobehavioral health has evolved into an active research agenda focusing on health disparities/equity as well as understanding the behavioral and psychosocial predictors and outcomes of chronic pain and pain among older Black adults.
$i++ ?>Pamela Cacchione, PhD CRNP, BC, FGSA, FAAN
Professor of Geropsychiatric Nursing
University of Pennsylvania
Dr. Cacchione is the Ralston House Term Chair in Gerontological Nursing, Professor of Geropsychiatric Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, and Nurse Scientist at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. She is a Gerontological Nurse Practitioner who has practiced for over 30 years across the care continuum. She is a nurse innovator. Her research focuses on social robotics for older adults. She is the CEO and Founder of AgingSense, a startup technology company to improve the lives of older adults. Dr Cacchione received her BSN from Villanova University, MSN from Marymount University, and PhD from Saint Louis University. She completed postdoctoral training at the University of Iowa. Dr. Cacchione has over 100 publications and is the Past Editor in Chief of Clinical Nursing Research and International Journal. Dr. Cacchione is a Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America and the American Academy of Nursing.
$i++ ?>Sean Curran, PhD, FGSA
Professor, Vice Dean, Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California
Chair, Biological Sciences Section (BioSci)
Sean P. Curran, PhD, is a Professor of Gerontology and Molecular and Computational Biology and the Vice Dean, Dean of Faculty, and Dean of Research for the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology. He is co-director of the USC-Buck Nathan Shock Center of Excellence in the Basic Biology of Aging. Curran developed the first-of-its-kind PhD program in Geroscience, which recruited its inaugural class in 2024. Curran’s research group has invested in defining molecular, genetic, and environmental factors that affect multiple health parameters (resistance to environmental and dietary stress, mobility, metabolism, reproductive fitness, and mitochondrial function) throughout life. The long-term goal is to generate blueprints that enable an individual to maximize their health over their lifespan. Informed by genetics, Curran’s lab develops the capacity to predict which diets are ideal for a healthy life and which should be avoided. Curran’s current research program is funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIA and NIGMS) and has received past research funding from the Ellison Medical Foundation, the American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR), and the American Heart Association. Curran is a Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA) and is the 2025 Vice Chair (Chair in 2026) of the GSA Biological Sciences Section. He has received numerous awards for his research, including the AFAR Vincent Cristofalo Rising Star in Aging Research Award, Paul F. Glenn Award, the Nathan Shock New Investigator Award (GSA), and the Ewald W. Busse Research Award. Curran’s mentoring has been recognized by the Mellon Foundation, and in 2019 he received the USC Provost’s Mentoring Award. He received his PhD in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from UCLA and post-doctoral training at Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts General Hospital.
$i++ ?>Howard B. Degenholtz, PhD, FGSA
Professor
University of Pittsburgh
A national leader in gerontology, Howard Degenholtz specializes in long-term services and supports and home- and community-based services. He developed self-reported quality-of-life measures for nursing home residents and co-authored a seminal paper on the benefits of the Green House model. His research has shown that older adults using consumer-directed personal care are not at increased risk of hospitalization, and he led a randomized trial demonstrating improved quality of life through tailored, individualized care planning. He has also studied end-of-life care in community and nursing home settings, examining advance directives and racial and ethnic disparities, with findings showing that older adults with advance care plans are less likely to experience terminal hospitalization. In organ and tissue donation, he developed and tested approaches to incorporate donor designation into primary care and implemented web-based training in driver’s license centers through randomized trials. He also hosts and produces The Gerontologist Podcast, published by the Gerontological Society of America and available on major podcast platforms.
$i++ ?>Laura K.M. Donorfio, PhD, FAGHE
Associate Professor, University of Connecticut
AGHE Chair, Gerontological Society of America
Laura K.M. Donorfio, PhD, FAGHE, is an Associate Professor at the University of Connecticut in Human Development and Family Sciences. Dr. Donorfio presently serves as the AGHE Vice Chair. She is the co-author of the book The Gerontology Field Placement: Internships and Practicums in Aging (2023, Springer). Her present research interests include the impact of educational innovation and intergenerational experiential learning and, most recently, how social processes impact the health and well-being of older SGM populations. Prior to joining UConn, Dr. Donorfio was a corporate gerontologist and director of consumer research for The Hartford Financial Services Group, collaborating with AARP and the MIT AgeLab. In 2011, she started AGHE’s first Teaching Institute, which is now in its 14th year. Dr. Donorfio holds fellow status in AGHE (2014), was awarded the Clark Tibbitts Award (2022), and was awarded AGHE’s Distinguished Teacher Designation (2009).
$i++ ?>Sohyun Kim, PhD
Assistant Professor
University of Texas at Arlington
Sohyun Kim's research interest focuses on leveraging technology-based interventions such as video chat, wearable devices, virtual reality, AI, and home monitoring to enhance the quality of life for family and formal caregivers and persons living with dementia and older adults. She actively collaborated in NIH-funded clinical trials, including training interventions for nursing home staff to reduce elderspeak communication and resistance to care in residents with dementia, telehealth intervention using video consulting to support caregiver well-being and manage problematic behaviors, interventions targeting family involvement in care for persons living with dementia in nursing home, and the development and testing of a measure assessing dyadic interaction during mealtime between nursing home staff and residents with dementia. Sohyun also conducted research as a primary investigator focusing on Korean dementia family caregivers’ difficulties and coping strategies, systematic reviews of instruments in dementia care, and development and psychometric testing of the instrument assessing dyadic communication between persons living with dementia and their family caregivers. One of her research projects is a feasibility study in providing regular video family visits for residents in LTSS and their family caregivers. Specifically, this intervention consists of using web conferencing and wristbands for real-time monitoring of physiological data.
$i++ ?>Chivon Mingo, PhD, FGSA
Associate Professor, Director of Undergraduate Programs, Gerontology Institute, Georgia State University
Chair, Behavioral and Social Sciences Section (BSS)
Dr. Chivon Mingo is a gerontologist joining the Gerontology Institute in the Fall of 2012. In 2003, Dr. Mingo received a B.S. in Psychology from Georgia State. Subsequently, she received a M.A. in Gerontology (2005) and a Ph.D. in Aging Studies (2010), both from the University of South Florida (USF) in Tampa, FL. Prior to joining the Georgia State Gerontology Institute, Dr. Mingo completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the Institute on Aging at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Mingo’s current research interests span psychology, health disparities, and aging. Specifically, her work has focused on identifying the causes of arthritis health disparities and ways to address them through community-based healthcare interventions. The ultimate goal of Dr. Mingo’s research is to design and evaluate culturally appropriate, appealing, and effective interventions for older adults with arthritis. In addition, use this research as a template to address disparities in other conditions (e.g., cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes) through community-based health care interventions. Dr. Mingo is the recipient of numerous awards and honors including the National Institutes of Health/National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities Loan Repayment Award, McKnight Doctoral Fellowship, Arthritis Foundation Student Fellowship, Aging Exchange Day Best Research Award, USF Office of Research & Innovation and Graduate School Research Excellence Award, Southern Regional Student Conference in Gerontology and Geriatrics Keynote Speaker and the USF College of Behavioral and Community Sciences Research Excellence Award.
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Recorded On: 02/26/2026
Join us for an informational webinar introducing the Entrepreneurship and Science Communication for Aging Research (ESCAAR) program at the University of Maryland School of Graduate Studies in Baltimore, a National Institute on Aging (NIA)–funded, 10-month training opportunity.
Join us for an informational webinar introducing the Entrepreneurship and Science Communication for Aging Research (ESCAAR) program at the University of Maryland School of Graduate Studies in Baltimore, a National Institute on Aging (NIA)–funded, 10-month training opportunity. This cohort-based training program runs for 10 months, from July 2026 through April 2027. It combines two in-person sessions in Baltimore with flexible online learning and is designed to help early-career researchers in aging strengthen science communication skills, explore translational and entrepreneurial pathways, and expand the impact of their work. The application deadline is March 15, 2026. The session will provide an overview of the program and application process.
$i++ ?>J. Howard Kucher, DPA, MBA
Associate Professor
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Dr. J. Howard "Jim" Kucher is an Associate Professor of Social Innovation at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. An award-winning teacher and internationally recognized thought leader, he is the author of several books on Social Entrepreneurship and has assisted over 100 area nonprofits and social enterprises in developing new models for meeting the needs of their constituents while increasing the sustainability of their organizations.
$i++ ?>Isabell May, PhD
Associate Professor
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Isabell C. May, PhD directs the Entrepreneurship and Science Communication for Aging and Aging-Related Research (ESCAAR) program and the Certificate in Science Communication at the University of Maryland School of Graduate Studies, and she leads the UMB Writing Center. She specializes in inclusive, interdisciplinary science communication across audiences and sectors and serves as Co-PI on an NIH Fogarty R25 focused on research ethics education in Morocco. A faculty fellow with Teach Access and the National Federation of the Blind, she advances accessibility in higher education and regularly publishes on science communication pedagogy.
$i++ ?>Diane Martin, PhD
Associate Professor
Geriatrics/Gerontology Education/Research program- University of Maryland, Baltimore
Dr. Diane Martin is an associate professor in the Graduate School, where she also serves as director of UMB's Geriatrics & Gerontology Education and Research (GGEAR) program, a state-funded program developed in 1987 to support interprofessional educational and research activities in the field of geriatrics and gerontology. Programs are designed to bolster the well-being of older adults and improve quality of later life. In partnership with the Maryland Area Health Education Centers and other agencies and organizations throughout the state, Dr. Martin develops interprofessional training opportunities related to aging and older adults for undergraduate, graduate, and professional students in health science and social science programs, as well as conferences and programs for professionals and the general public across the state. As an applied gerontologist, Dr. Martin maintains an active interdisciplinary research program supportive of geriatric interprofessional education, workforce development, and quality of later life initiatives (i.e., aging-in-place, person-centeredness, promoting optimal aging). She earned her doctorate in Psychology from Northcentral University, a Master's in Experimental Psychology from Towson University, and received her Bachelor's degree in Psychology from the College of Notre Dame of Maryland. Dr. Martin served as a GLOBALtimore Fellow, is a member of the Gerontological Society of America and the Academy for Gerontology in Higher Education, and currently serves as President of Sigma Phi Omega, the International Academic Honor & Professional Society in Gerontology.
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Recorded On: 02/17/2026
Join NIA leadership for a 90-minute interactive webinar highlighting multidisciplinary aging and Alzheimer’s research, NIA scientific priorities, and funding opportunities, with discussion of resources available to support researchers across career stages.
In the decades since its establishment, the National Institute on Aging (NIA) at the National Institutes of Health has propelled advances and innovations across multiple domains of aging research, including basic biology, neuroscience, geriatrics and clinical gerontology, and behavioral and social science. NIA is also the federal leader in Alzheimer’s disease research. This multidisciplinary research portfolio affords a wide array of opportunities in aging science for early-career and established investigators alike.
Join NIA leadership for this interactive 90-minute webinar focused on the latest opportunities in aging research. The webinar will provide a forum for discussion between the research community and NIA leadership, explore research foci of NIA’s scientific divisions, and review opportunities and resources available to researchers.
Agenda
Start Time Topic Speaker(s) 10:30 AM ET Introduction Kenneth Santora, NIA Acting Deputy Director and Director of the NIA Division of Extramural Activities 10:32 AM ET Remarks from the NIA Director Richard Hodes, NIA Director Presentations from NIA Divisions 10:42 AM ET Division of Extramural Activities Kenneth Santora 10:47 AM ET Division of Behavioral and Social Research Lisbeth Nielsen, Director, NIA Division of Behavioral and Social Research 10:52 AM ET Division of Geriatrics and Clinical Gerontology Evan Hadley, Director, NIA Division of Geriatrics and Clinical Gerontology 10:57 AM ET Division of Neuroscience Jennie Larkin, Director, NIA Division of Neuroscience 11:02 AM ET Division of Aging Biology Viviana Perez Montes, Director, NIA Division of Aging Biology 11:07 AM ET Intramural Research Program Eleanor Simonsick, Epidemiologist, Translational Gerontology Branch, NIA Intramural Research Program 11:12 AM ET General Q&A 11:30 AM ET Small Group Discussions 12:00 PM ET Conclude
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