The Program the Global Demography of Aging at Harvard University (PGDA) led by David E. Bloom will provide support to Harvard University faculty to carry out research on important themes related to aging and health themes that cannot necessarily be encompassed within individual departments and schools. The six themes of the Program will be: measurement of the global patterns of disease, mortality, and morbidity in aging populations; the social determinants of population health and aging; the economics of health care provision for the elderly; the economics of aging; migration and aging; and HIV/AIDS and aging. Each theme has established researchers with significant experience and promising researchers who can be nurtured. The Program has the potential to generate significant new research in the demography and economics of aging through, for example, new longitudinal studies of aging and intervention studies that can identify policy-relevant causal effects. Particular strengths of the Program are in measuring risk factors and modeling the effect of inventions on population health; the role of social networks in determining health; the effects of incentives in Medicare on utilization, care quality, and health outcomes; behavioral and experimental economic approaches to explaining individual choices; the macroeconomic effects of population aging; the role of HIV on aging in Africa; and the economic and health effects of migration in the United States. The Program will have five Core activities: an administrative and research support Core, a program development Core, an external innovative network Core, a dissemination Core, and a statistical data enclave Core. The administrative Core will provide leadership and oversight for the Program's activities. The program development Core will support pilot projects that will lead to new research initiatives that contribute to our six themes. The international network Core will provide links to six overseas institutions to provide a platform for international field work, particularly in supporting existin longitudinal studies and developing new longitudinal studies and intervention studies of aging. The dissemination Core will make the results of Harvard's research accessible to researchers, policy makers, students and the public. The data enclave Core will assist with data protection and analysis through resources such as a restricted data enclave.

Public Health Relevance

Aging is an interconnected global phenomenon and our global approach will, firstly, increase our understanding of the processes of aging in terms of the determinants of healthy aging and the economic implications of population aging. Secondly, our research is aimed at providing high-quality evidence on the effects of interventions to improve both the health of the elderly and the economic wellbeing of older people as the population ages. This evidence base will be highly relevant to policy debates.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
3P30AG024409-14S1
Application #
9976217
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1)
Program Officer
Phillips, John
Project Start
2004-09-15
Project End
2020-06-30
Budget Start
2019-08-01
Budget End
2020-06-30
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Harvard University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
149617367
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02115
McGovern, Mark E; Canning, David; Bärnighausen, Till (2018) Accounting for non-response bias using participation incentives and survey design: An application using gift vouchers. Econ Lett 171:239-244
Bloom, David E; Khoury, Alexander; Subbaraman, Ramnath (2018) The promise and peril of universal health care. Science 361:
Shrime, Mark G; Weinstein, Milton C; Hammitt, James K et al. (2018) Trading Bankruptcy for Health: A Discrete-Choice Experiment. Value Health 21:95-104
Zack, Rachel M; Irema, Kahema; Kazonda, Patrick et al. (2018) Validity of an FFQ to measure nutrient and food intakes in Tanzania. Public Health Nutr 21:2211-2220
Dayalu, Rashmi; Cafiero-Fonseca, Elizabeth T; Fan, Victoria Y et al. (2018) Priority setting in health: development and application of a multi-criteria algorithm for the population of New Zealand's Waikato region. Cost Eff Resour Alloc 16:52
Okello, Samson; Ueda, Peter; Kanyesigye, Michael et al. (2017) Association between HIV and blood pressure in adults and role of body weight as a mediator: Cross-sectional study in Uganda. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) 19:1181-1191
Kakarmath, Sujay S; Zack, Rachel M; Leyna, Germana H et al. (2017) Dietary determinants of serum total cholesterol among middle-aged and older adults: a population-based cross-sectional study in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. BMJ Open 7:e015028
Jimenez, Daniel E; Schmidt, Andrew C; Kim, Giyeon et al. (2017) Impact of comorbid mental health needs on racial/ethnic disparities in general medical care utilization among older adults. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 32:909-921
Manne-Goehler, Jennifer; Montana, Livia; Gómez-Olivé, Francesc Xavier et al. (2017) The ART Advantage: Health Care Utilization for Diabetes and Hypertension in Rural South Africa. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 75:561-567
Zack, Rachel M; Irema, Kahema; Kazonda, Patrick et al. (2016) Determinants of high blood pressure and barriers to diagnosis and treatment in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. J Hypertens 34:2353-2364

Showing the most recent 10 out of 43 publications