(SALT LAKE CITY)—Diana Kuh, Ph.D., has a simple description for healthy aging: Keeping moving, keeping your marbles, and keeping your spirits up.
Kuh, a British academician and researcher who is one of the world's foremost experts on aging, believes healthy aging can be understood by examining the biological, social and psychosocial risk processes in early life that influence health, aging and chronic disease risk in later life. She pioneered this approach, known as "life course," to understanding healthy aging.
On Tuesday, March 25, Kuh will share her perspective on healthy aging as the keynote speaker at the ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ of Utah. Her address, "A life course approach to healthy aging: what do life course studies tell us and what are the research gaps?" takes place at 8:30 a.m. in the ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ Guest House Conference Center. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is requested.
A professor of Life Course Epidemiology at ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ College London (UCL), Kuh has made seminal contributions to the study of aging, which include leading the British Medical Research Council's (MRC) National Survey of ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ and Development (NSHD) – a longitudinal study that has tracked 5,000 British people since their births in March 1946 – and directing the MRC Unit for Lifelong ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ and Ageing at UCL. (MRC is a British government agency similar to the National Institutes of ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ.) She also is the principal investigator of the ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµy Ageing across the Life Course (HALCyon) research network, an interdisciplinary group of scientists from nine British studies looking at three aspects of healthy aging: physical and cognitive ability, psychological and social well-being, and the underlying biology of aging. She is co-director of a new National Institutes of ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ-funded program that brings together longitudinal studies to investigate lifetime influences on aging.
In a broad range of 300 publications, Kuh has shown the importance of ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµhood development and lifetime socioeconomic factors, lifestyle and health experience on later adiposity (body fat), cardiovascular and reproductive function, strength and physical performance, quality of life and survival.
The theme for this year's research retreat is "Successful aging: Years to Life and Life to Years," according to Mark A. Supiano, M.D., professor of internal medicine, chief of the and executive director of the Center on Aging. As baby boomers have begun to retire, aging has become an issue of primary importance in health care and many other aspects of American life. This "graying of America" will have an important impact in Utah, too, which currently has the sixth fastest growth rate in the nation for people 65 and older.
, ÈËÆÞÖгöÊÓÆµ of Utah professor of family and consumer studies and director of the , is a demographer conducting research on exceptional longevity. "To understand aging and how we might minimize its effects, it is important that we think about lifestyle and socioeconomic factors spanning conception to our years as senior citizens," he says. "As a leading expert, Dr. Kuh will discuss our understanding of this life course approach and will kick off key discussions with local experts at the symposia."
The conference kicks off on Monday, March 24, 2014, with a poster presentation session (3 p.m.-6 p.m.) showcasing Center on Aging members' research on various aspects of aging. On Tuesday morning, March 25, after Kuh's keynote address, three concurrent symposia will begin at 10 o'clock:
Three more symposia run from 11:15 to 12:15:
Education about aging has become an increasingly important part of health care training, with both the U College of Nursing and School of Medicine incorporating geriatrics and gerontology into their curricula. The nursing college has a highly regarded interdisciplinary program in gerontology and is home to a Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing Excellence, one of nine original centers, to train future nursing practitioners and educators in the field of aging. Supiano has used a grant from the Reynolds Foundation to get more geriatrics content into the medical school curriculum and is director of the U's MSTAR (Medical Students Training in Aging Research) Program.
For information and to register for the aging retreat please visit www.aging.utah.edu.