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Aging Teleconference Series
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Aging Teleconference Series

Aging, Environmental Health, and IDD

This fall, the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD) with Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR) and our distinguished panels of guest speakers brought you a groundbreaking series of teleconference calls on aging, environmental health, and disability. This series was sponsored by the John Merck Fund.

The Series included the following five presentations: Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging with Ted Schettler, Maria Valenti
Tues Oct 12th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Built Environment with Kathy Sykes, Rodney Harrell, Regina Gray
Tues Oct 19th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Psychosocial Environment with Danny George, Peter Whitehouse
Tues Oct 26th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Chemical Environment with Maye Thompson, Marybeth Palmigiano
Tues Nov 2nd from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Food Environment with Michelle Gottlieb, Emma Sirois
Tues Nov 9th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

For More Information on the Aging Teleconference Series, Click Here.

Archives of the Aging, Environmental Health, and IDD Teleconference Series, Fall 2010

Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging with Ted Schettler, Maria Valenti
Tues Oct 12th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Materials audio archive

Built Environment with Kathy Sykes, Rodney Harrell, Regina Gray
Tues Oct 19th from 2-3pm Eastern Time
 
Materials Materials Materials audio archive

Psychosocial Environment with Danny George, Peter Whitehouse
Tues Oct 26th from 2-3pm Eastern Time
 
Materials Materials audio archive
To link to the Blog, Click Here

Chemical Environment with Maye Thompson, Marybeth Palmigiano
Tues Nov 2nd from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Materials audio archive

Food Environment with Michelle Gottlieb, Emma Sirois
Tues Nov 9th from 2-3pm Eastern Time

Materials audio archive

Resources for Healthy Aging and the Environment


Teleconference Descriptions

October 12th - Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging
Ted Schettler MD MPH, Maria Valenti

The report Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging, provides compelling evidence that environmental factors play a major role in the overwhelming majority of cases of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, even in people who are genetically predisposed. The report explains how diet, exercise, exposure to toxic chemicals, and socioeconomic stress across the lifespan can change biological pathways to influence the risk of these and other chronic diseases including diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease - themselves risk factors for neurodegeneration. Fortunately, there is much that we can do to avoid those health problems and greatly improve the odds for delaying or even preventing disease onset - as a society, as individuals, and as family members. This presentation will provide a summary of the changing environment and disease patterns; a lifespan and ecological analysis of health and the many factors that contribute to disease; the underlying, biological dimensions of neurodegeneration, and other chronic illnesses of the Western Disease Cluster; brief discussion of environmental factors affecting the risk of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases; brief recommendations for individual, community, and societal changes to prevent disease and improve the health of people and the planet.

Ted Schettler MD, MPH is Science Director of the Science and Environmental Health Network (www.sehn.org). He has a medical degree from Case Western Reserve University, a masters in public health from Harvard University, and practiced medicine for over 30 years. Schettler also serves as science advisor for the Collaborative on Health and Environment Network and for the Health Care Without Harm campaign. He is co-author of Generations at Risk: Reproductive Health and the Environment (MIT Press 1999) In Harm's Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development (GBPSR 2000), and Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging (GBPSR/SEHN 2008). He has published a number of articles on related topics in peer-reviewed journals and has served on advisory committees of the US EPA and National Academy of Sciences.
Maria Valenti has served in leadership positions with Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility (www.psr.org/Boston) for the past two decades including as Executive Director and Program Director. She has helped develop and manage a number of national, multi-state projects that have provided educational materials and trained over 15,000 health professionals and others on environmental health issues. These include the In Harm's Way Training Program for Health Professionals, the Pediatric Environmental Health Toolkit (materials development, pilot study, training program, and online CE course), and most recently Environmental Drivers of Chronic Disease, focusing on healthy aging across the lifespan. She is a co-author with medical experts of GBPSR's major peer-reviewed publications on environment and health including Generations at Risk: Reproductive Health and the Environment (MIT Press 1999, 2000), In Harm's Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development (GBPSR 2000), and Environmental Threats to Healthy Aging (GBPSR/Science and Environmental Health Network 2008).
 

October 19th - Built Environment
Kathy Sykes MA, Rodney Harrell PhD, Regina Gray PhD

Can changes to the built environment improve health and well-being for older adults and persons of all ages? Can those changes also mitigate climate change and lead to greater sustainability. The presentation will explore the answers to those questions. It will examine threats to healthy aging in communities that include the physical and natural environments in which people live, work, study and recreate. We will look at air pollution, extreme heat events related to the built environment, drinking water contaminants, and conditions exacerbated by a poor or dangerous built environment including isolation and lack of physical activity etc. We will discuss strategies for interventions by government, the private sector and citizens including planning and design of "healthy" housing in advantageous locations such as near services and transit, building "Complete Streets" and connective street and transit networks, and fostering a healthier environment by reducing environmental health hazards, supporting environmental justice, and encouraging physical activity. 

In 1998, Kathy Sykes began working for the US EPA. In 2002, she began serving as the Senior Advisor for the Aging Initiative. She strives to raise awareness among older adults, and public health and aging professionals about environmental health hazards. She is committed to protecting the environment through smart growth practices. During her 24 year career, Ms. Sykes has held various health and aging policy positions at the state level and at federal agencies.  She served as the Associate Director for Planning & Legislation for the CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, as professional staff for the U.S. Special Committee on Aging, and as Associate Staff for Congressman David R. Obey.  She worked as a special assistant for the Administrator of the Wisconsin State Division of Health. Kathy received a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Public Policy and Administration and Health Services Administration.  She is a Fellow of the Behavioral and Social Science Section of the Gerontological Society of America.
Dr. Rodney Harrell is the Senior Strategic Policy Advisor for Housing and Livable Communities with the Public Policy Institute at AARP. He is responsible for developing AARP's policies on housing and livable communities issues, managing the housing research agenda, and conducting independent research. Dr. Harrell is lead author of "Preserving Affordability and Access in Livable Communities: Subsidized Housing Opportunities near Transit and the 50+Population" and several other housing publications. Prior to working at AARP, he has worked as an independent research and evaluation consultant, as a researcher and instructor for the University of Maryland, and for the State of Maryland on revitalization and housing issues. He graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the honors program at Howard University, earned dual master's degrees in Public Affairs and in Urban and Regional Planning from the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University, and received a Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Design from the University of Maryland, College Park
Regina Gray is an analyst for the Division of Affordable Housing Research and Technology Division in the Office of Policy Development and Research (PD&R) at the U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development.  Since joining HUD in 2000, Regina’s research activities have focused on sustainable development, urban design and land use planning, transit oriented development, energy and green building practices, and affordable housing preservation.  Her work in these areas is closely aligned with the Obama Administration’s sustainability goals.  Beyond her work at HUD, Regina collaborates with other federal agencies on a host of sustainability initiatives, and is actively involved in these interagency efforts.  She is the PD&R lead in supporting HUD’s new Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities (OSHC) strategic planning efforts, integrating the goals and programs of partner federal agencies and stakeholder organizations.  She also has had a key role in working with the Environmental Protection Agency on research related to smart growth, sustainable energy, and environmental planning.  With the Department of Transportation’s Federal Transit Administration (FTA), Regina is the co-chair of the FTA-HUD Working Group for affordable housing and transit.  In addition, Regina is member of the HUD’s partnership with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on the HHS-HUD Partnership subgroup for Sustainable Housing and Healthy Communities, where she is working with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to help develop a health assessment impact tool.  Most recently, she has collaborated with HUD’s Office of Healthy Homes and Lead Control (OHHLC) and OSHC on the White House Interagency Task Force report addressing childhood obesity.  Regina earned a Bachelors of Arts in Political Science from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia; a Masters of Arts from the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. in Political Science and Public Policy; and a doctorate from the University of Maryland, College Park in Political Science and Policy Studies.  In her off time, she enjoys running, biking, reading, music, and volunteering for various social and political causes.
 

October 26th - Psychosocial Environment
Peter Whitehouse MD, PhD Danny George PhD

In this presentation we will explore the intergenerational approach to creating psychosocial learning environments and communities. Human beings, both in our evolution as hunter-gatherers and then in agrarian societies, have existed in communities composed of adults, children, and elders.  Not surprisingly, a growing body of research demonstrates the bio-psychosocial benefits of intergenerational engagement for persons in their late life stages. However, urbanization and changing demographics in modern societies have served not only to intensify the environmental threats to healthy aging, but have also disrupted possibilities for human connection across the generations. We will review the relationship between psychosocial environments and brain health, but also focus on deeper and broader aspects of brain health including the strong and sustaining sense of purpose and usefulness that human beings manifest in community.  We then turn our attention to current international efforts to develop intergenerational programs that support brain health and healthy aging, spotlighting our experiences at The Intergenerational School (TIS), a 10-year old public school in Cleveland, Ohio that provides a shared learning environment for children, young adults, middle-aged adults, and elders. We will review the evidence that this school benefits learners across the generations, particularly older persons with dementia.  Finally, we will share our vision for a broader understanding of brain health, as manifest by our efforts to create intergenerational learning and wellness communities in Cleveland, Ohio and elsewhere.

Peter J. Whitehouse, MD, PhD is Professor of Neurology and current or former Professor of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, Psychology, Nursing, Organizational Behavior, Cognitive Science, Bioethics, and History at Case Western Reserve University. He is a geriatric neurologist, cognitive neuroscientist, and deep bioethicist. He was trained at The Johns Hopkins University where he received his MD-PhD in 1976-7. His research has been supported by the NIH and many private foundations. He has made discoveries concerning the basic biology and clinical aspects of dementia. He is the coauthor of a book entitled The Myth of Alzheimer’s: what you aren’t being told about today’s’ most dreaded diagnosis (www.themythofalzheimers.com). He is evolving to become an integrative narrative evolutionary healer and maintain an active practice with elders facing cognitive challenges. His main passion is developing innovative learning environments to promote collective wisdom and contribute to planetary health. One prime example is The Intergenerational School (www.tisonline.org) which he founded with his wife Catherine, the current principal. He has also taught about leadership and ethics at Case in the medical and management schools and directed the undergraduate honors program.
Dr. Daniel George is assistant professor of medical humanities at Penn State College of Medicine. He is co-author with Dr. Peter Whitehouse of the book "The Myth of Alzheimer's: What You Aren't Being Told About Today's Most Dreaded Diagnosis." Together, he, Dr. Whitehouse, and several colleagues from Case Western Reserve University have developed a Storybank alongside a planned university BioBank in Cleveland.


November 2nd - Chemical Environment
Maye Thompson RN PhD, Marybeth Palmigiano MPH

Modifiable lifetime environmental factors that influence healthy aging include exposure to toxic chemi­cals. The U.S. imports or produces approximately 42 billion pounds of chemicals daily. Synthetic chemicals contaminate every ecosystem - air, water, soil and food - in the world. Virtually all people and wildlife are regularly exposed to a complex mixture of industrial chemicals that did not exist before World War II. Studies of newborns’ umbilical cord blood shows they have been exposed to industrial contaminants in the womb. Most industrial chemicals in the workplace and in consumer products have not undergone even basic toxicity screening. Only a few of 200 chemicals known to be neurotoxic to humans have been evaluated for their impacts on the developing brains of children or aging brains of adults. Data that do exist show that exposures to environmental chemicals can increase the risk of many diseases and conditions relevant to an aging population, including neurodegenerative disorders, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and diabetes.  In this presentation we will review toxic chemicals and their affect on health throughout the lifespan with a particular emphasis on obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegeneration including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.  Additionally we will discuss current state and national efforts to reform chemical policy.

Maye Thompson RN PhD is the Environmental Health Program Director at Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility.  In addition, she has worked with the Oregon Nurses Association, Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides, Oregon Environmental Coalition, Health Care Without Harm, and PSR.  Her PhD in Nursing focused on women

 

Partnership Activities

AUCD-CDC Disability and Health Topical Webinar Series: Built Environment, Disability, and Health Aging
This webinar is part of AUCD’s technical assistance to CDC’s 16 State Disability and Health Grantees, which are funded by the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities (NCBDDD) for Preventing Secondary Conditions and Promoting the Health of People with Disabilities. This webinar was supported by the AARP Public Policy Institute, the EPA Aging Initiative, the Collaborative on Health and Environment, and the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD)'s Environmental Health Initiative (EHI).

The recording is now available in the AUCD Webinar Library Archive, under the title "Built Environment, Disability, and Health Aging". 

For a link to the audio recording of this webinar,