Lessons in Lifespan Health
is an author, coach and teacher who leads a yoga class at the USC Leonard Davis School. He joined us to talk about his book, The Art of Conscious Aging and how to redefine yourself and find fulfillment as you age. Transcript I hear all the time, I used to do yoga, but now my body doesn't like it. Well, find a new yoga class. If you remember how it made you feel, then doing it in a new way, maybe a gentler class, maybe a hot yoga class that's in the dark, that's slow, where you hold the poses and no one's looking at you because you may be self-conscious, maybe that's the...
info_outline Studying how the brain’s blood vessels affect cognitive healthLessons in Lifespan Health
Dan Nation is a professor of gerontology and medicine at USC. His research focuses on vascular factors in the brain and how they affect memory decline and dementia in older adults. He joined us to talk about studying blood vessels in the brain to identify early signs of dementia and potential therapies to treat it. Transcript Speaker 1 (): The variability in your blood pressure day to day, month to month, year to year, and sometimes even beat to beat–the variability in your blood pressure is predictive of dementia risk. So higher levels of blood pressure variability are bad, even if you have...
info_outline Deprescribing and medication management for older adultsLessons in Lifespan Health
Michelle Keller is an assistant professor of gerontology and the Leonard and Sophie Davis Early Career Chair in Minority Aging at the USC Leonard Davis School. She spoke to us about her research focused on improving patient-clinician communication, medication management, and the identification of dementia in minority older adults. Here are highlights from our conversation. On polypharmacy “When it comes to older adults and medications, it's important to understand that while medications can be incredibly beneficial for treating various conditions, they can also present really unique risks in...
info_outline Improving the health and well-being of family caregiversLessons in Lifespan Health
Francesca Falzarano is an assistant professor of gerontology at the USC Leonard Davis School. Her research is inspired by her personal experience as a caregiver to her parents and explores how to improve the mental health and well-being of family caregivers, including through the use of technology. On young caregivers “I think right now it's estimated that five and a half million individuals are under the age of 18 are caring for a parent or some family member with chronic illness, mental health issues, dementia-related illnesses, and other age-related impairments. So, this is something...
info_outline Aging among Black AmericansLessons in Lifespan Health
Lauren Brown is an assistant professor at the USC Leonard Davis School. Her research uses publicly available data to uncover the unique difficulties Black Americans face in maintaining physical and psychological well-being as they age. Her lab both challenges the methods used to study older Black adults and strives to increase diversity in data science research with the goal of increasing the visibility of Black and Brown people via data and storytelling. Quotes from the episode On the role of racism in biomedical and statistical sciences and disease prediction If you think about the...
info_outline Using dance to ease Parkinson’s symptomsLessons in Lifespan Health
Patrick Corbin is an associate professor of practice at the USC Gloria Kaufman School and an internationally renowned dance artist whose career has spanned over 30 years and bridged the worlds of classical ballet, modern and contemporary dance. He recently spoke to us about his work, exploring the positive effects that dance can have on neurology. On movement and movement therapy Well, on a neurological level movement is cognition. Movement stimulates cognition. So that's sort of the sciencey part. The other part is that dance is a multifaceted, multilingual way of movement, and...
info_outline The effects of exercise on the brainLessons in Lifespan Health
Connie Cortes is an assistant professor of gerontology at the USC Leonard Davis School. Her work straddles the fields of neuroscience and exercise medicine, and she recently spoke to us about her research seeking to understand what is behind the beneficial effects of exercise on the brain with the goal of developing what she calls “exercise in a pill” therapies for cognitive decline associated with aging and neurodegenerative diseases. On brain plasticity and brain aging Brain plasticity we define as the ability of the brain to adapt to new conditions. And this can be mean...
info_outline Tips for healthy agingLessons in Lifespan Health
and instructional associate professor of gerontology at the USC Leonard Davis School, and a specialist in geriatric medicine, joins us for a conversation about healthy aging, including tips on how to keep the body and mind functioning for as long as possible. Quotes from this episode On the importance of setting small goals "People may have all the good intentions, but they might set up goals that are too ambitious and then when they don't reach that goal, they feel frustrated, and they quit… We have to let them understand that goals must be small…So, an apple a day. We have to eat the...
info_outline Cellular balance across the lifespanLessons in Lifespan Health
Dion Dickman, associate professor of neuroscience and gerontology, joins George Shannon to discuss how the nervous system processes and stabilizes the transfer of information in healthy brains, aging brains and after injury or disease. Quotes from the episode: On synaptic plasticity: “Synapses are essential, fundamental units of nervous system function and plasticity is this remarkable ability to change. And throughout early development into maturation and even into old age, synapses just have this amazing resilience to change and adapt to different situations and injury disease,...
info_outline A balancing act: homestasis under stressLessons in Lifespan Health
is a Distinguished Professor of gerontology, molecular and computational biology, and biochemistry and molecular medicine at USC. Over the course of his career, he has played a central role in defining the pathways and mechanisms by which the body is able to maintain balance under stress and in uncovering the role aging plays in disrupting this balancing act. He recently joined Professor George Shannon to discuss his research on how the body is able to maintain balance under stress and the implications it could have for preventing age-related disease and decline. Quotes from this...
info_outlineKate Wilber is the Mary Pickford Chair in Gerontology and director of the Secure Old Age Lab at the USC Leonard Davis School. She's also the co-director of the National Center on Elder Abuse, which is housed at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. She recently spoke to George Shannon about her research, including her work exploring ways to provide long-term care services and supports that allow older adults to be as independent as possible and the challenges and opportunities that technology provides in this area.
Quotes from this episode
On building on lessons learned during the pandemic
“I think a lot of what we saw were challenges that we already knew were there - how fragmented services are, how older adults can be at risk of isolation, how important the home community-based services and programs and opportunities to interact are for everybody. And I think showing the importance of community, which we didn't have during the pandemic, except a bit on social media and phone calls and maybe people getting together outside. So the key question is, how do we take the learning and the recognition of what we already knew into the future to build on these important lessons, to do better with our aging service delivery? I was going to say our aging service delivery system, but that's a huge problem. There isn't a system; there's just a lot of different components of a system.”
On innovations in long-term care and supports
“We have to prepare for an aging population. And until recently I felt like we didn't do that great a job preparing, but I see a lot of exciting innovations, which to some extent may have been jump-started a little bit because of the challenges of the pandemic. We have a variety of models of senior living and I think we're going to see more innovation there or the innovations that have been developed take off because they did better in the pandemic too. So if we look at what kind of care was best for older adults who maybe were isolated or need long term services and supports during the pandemic, how do we build on that? And how do we make sure that we translate what we know into reasonable programs and policies.”
On barriers to implementing technology solutions
“People not only need to have some kind of device. They need to have broadband, it needs to work. And we've seen that in some parts of the country, especially in rural areas, broadband it's not available. All the things we take for granted, electricity, water, et cetera, how much is this an essential service that we’ll do a better job providing across the nation in areas where it doesn't exist very effectively now. And then as I said, how do we help people learn? And what are the particular cultural competencies required for trainers? What are the different uses that people want? This gets back to being person-centered and engaging the people that will be the end-user users and understanding what's most effective for them.
There are still a fairly large proportion of older adults who don't have access to any sort of computer; some have smartphones. And there is this notion, I guess, if we build it, they will come. Or if we give it to them, they'll use it, it would be the way of talking about that. But there's a variety of barriers. And if you hand somebody a box with a computer in it and say, ‘There you go, you're now going to go on the other side, the right side of the digital divide.’ They're not. So what can we learn about how to help people use technology in a way that is useful for them effective, meaningful?”
On telehealth
“So this will be a time saver. I think that's pretty clear, but the nursing facilities have to invest in it. The staff have to invest in it. They have to learn how to do it. And one of the things we're seeing is they thought the residents would be the most resistant and they're not. They're like, ’Okay, if I can see my doctor this way, fine.’ But I think the question is, how is it used, where is it most effective and where is it not a good replacement for a physician coming to the facility? So, there's a fair amount of literature developing on this, but I think there's so many exciting innovations that are rolling out and we need to build on what we're learning and make them better and be more effective in the next generation of telehealth and facilities and helping people on the digital divide connect. So all these things are really exciting opportunities to learn how to connect.”
On person-centered care
“So the idea behind person-centered care is that people have different needs. Of course, they also have different preferences, different preferences for care and for services and for supports and for contributing and giving back and primarily and mostly as with all of us, for controlling their lives and the decisions that are made. So person-centered care recognizes that the power should live with the individual in terms of the ability to make decisions about care informed decisions. But I think sometimes, we, as professionals can see, oh, this would be best for this person. And professionals are extremely busy also. And so it kind of overlooks sometimes the person's needs and preferences and working in areas like elder mistreatment and elder self-neglect. A lot of times people have legitimate reasons for wanting things that we don't necessarily think would be the best choice, but person-centered care asks us to really get in touch with what's behind those preferences. And to what extent can we ethically honor them and this is something I see the field doing a much better job thinking about and working on and great things have been written. And the American Geriatric Society a few years ago had an expert panel come together and develop a definition and sort of protocols for this. And I think that's really moving the field.
One more thing I'll say is that ageism contributes here. So we make assumptions about older people that they can't express their preferences adequately. And providers talk to the caregiver, not the older person. Or they say this is what needs to be done. So I think there's also a culture change of recognizing that it's about the older person. And we start with the older person, and that's not to say that there aren't age-related increased likelihoods, but not inevitabilities of memory issues and things of that kind. And so we need to be clear that the person has the capacity to express their preferences, but we start with person-centered. The elder is the person who whatever is happening is happening on behalf of, or for, or with. And that's where we start.”
On students
“That's our future. … Our legacy is you see the students that go through our program and they're very excited about learning and they bring innovation and enthusiasm, and then they go out and do wonderful things and they become the leaders of the field. And you could see that across the board in so many areas.”