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Appendix D: Public Workshop Agendas
Pages 257-276

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From page 257...
... WORKSHOP 1 AGENDA Social, Behavioral, and Environmental Enablers for Healthy Longevity: A Workshop for the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity Initiative AARP 601 E Street, NW Washington, DC November 6–8, 2019 Objectives This 3-day public workshop will examine the social, behavioral, and environmental enablers for healthy longevity. Workshop participants will discuss 257
From page 258...
... Day 1 – Wednesday, November 6 1:00pm Welcome remarks JO ANN JENKINS, Chief Executive Officer, AARP An overview of the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity Initiative VICTOR DZAU, President, National Academy of Medicine Workshop overview and goals JENNIE POPAY, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Public Health, Lancaster University
From page 259...
... APPENDIX D 259 Keynote Address: A conceptual framework for understanding the social, behavioral, and environmental enablers for healthy longevity from a health equity lens SIR MICHAEL MARMOT, Director, Institute of Health Equity Q&A Discussion SESSION 1 -- Foundations for Healthy Longevity: Understanding the Contributions and Linkages of Social, Behavioral, and Environmental Enablers 2:20pm Session 1 Objectives: • Discuss the meaning of "healthy longevity" • Highlight how to measure healthy longevity and the underlying reasons for global- and country-level trends and disparities in healthy longevity • Understand the contributions and interactions of social, behavioral, and environmental enablers upon healthy longevity Plenary Presentation: What is "healthy longevity"? Understanding the multifaceted challenges and opportunities from a life course perspective LISA BERKMAN, Director, Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies Panel Presentations: The factors underlying current and future trends of healthy longevity ALI MOKDAD, Chief Strategy Officer of Population Health, University of Washington Understanding the linkages of social, behavioral, and environmental determinants across diverse populations, lifestyles, and contexts ASGHAR ZAIDI, Professor of Gerontology, Seoul National University 3:00pm Q&A Discussion 3:30pm Break
From page 260...
... 5:50pm Observations from Day 1 MOSA MOSHABELA, Dean and Head, School of Nursing and Public Health, University of KwaZulu-Natal 6:00pm Adjourn 6:15pm  fficial Launch of the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity O Initiative 6:45pm Reception Day 2 – Thursday, November 7 8:30am Welcome and Recap Day 1 JENNIE POPAY, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Public Health, Lancaster University SESSION 2 -- Age-Friendly Environments: Overcoming Challenges and Harnessing Best Practices 8:40am Session 2 Objectives: • Understand lessons learned and best practices for different programs that have aimed to create age-friendly environments in various contexts
From page 261...
... APPENDIX D 261 • Examine cross-cutting challenges that need to be overcome across different programs • Discuss how to bolster evidence and evaluate age-friendly environments that could inform other contexts Opening Presentation: Designing safe, smart, and sustainable built environments across diverse contexts to support healthy longevity CHINMOY SARKAR, Assistant Professor of Geographic Information Systems, Urban Health and Environment, The University of Hong Kong Case Studies: Age-friendly environments in the UK and Europe: Improving the quality of life for aging populations PAUL MCGARRY, Head, Greater Manchester Ageing Hub Redesigning communities to transform aged societies: A model from Kashiwa, Japan HIROKO AKIYAMA, Professor, Institute of Gerontology, University of Tokyo Building a city focused on healthy longevity and well-being: Learning from Kigali, Rwanda NADINE UMUTONI GATSINZI, Vice Mayor in Charge of Socio-Economic Affairs, City of Kigali, Rwanda Q&A Discussion and Moderator Synthesis of Session 2 10:30am Break SESSION 3 -- Reimagining the Social World Across the Life Course 10:45am Session 3 Objectives: • Reexamine the social world for aging populations where they can actively contribute and thrive in societies • Assess approaches that leverage effective social care and services that avoid the overmedicalization of aging • Evaluate how social actions and reforms potentially address health inequalities across populations Moderator: LAURA CARSTENSEN, Stanford University, United States
From page 262...
... 262 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY Panel Presentations: Lifelong learning opportunities and engagement of aging populations OMOBOLANLE AMAIKE, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Lagos Harnessing social networks and intergenerational support to empower active lifestyles across the life course QUYEN TRAN, Regional Programme Advisor, Asia and Pacific Regional Office, HelpAge International Cultivating environments that promote work, volunteering, and reciprocity NANCY MORROW-HOWELL, Distinguished Professor of Social Policy, Washington University in St. Louis Q&A Discussion and Moderator Synthesis of Session 3 12:00pm Lunch SESSION 4 -- Uncovering the Unknowns and Extricating Uncertainties to Push the Field Forward 1:00pm Session 4 Objectives: • Elucidate the uncertainties and challenges related to healthy longevity to help advance scientific and policy agendas • Identify the roles and contributions of various stakeholders required to overcome the challenges • Explore foundational principles and potential solutions for extricating challenges across a variety of contexts Moderator: PAUL IRVING, Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging Panel Discussion: Growing challenges of labor market dynamics and financial decisions for aging people and their families: Perspectives from Asia and Eastern Europe ELENA GLINSKAYA, Lead Social Protection Specialist, World Bank
From page 263...
... 4:30pm Audience-Wide Discussion: Audience members will report back on their breakout groups and engage in a general discussion. 5:20pm Observations from Day 2 PAUL IRVING, Chairman, Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging 5:30pm Adjourn Day 3 – Friday, November 8 8:30am Welcome and Recap Day 2 JENNIE POPAY, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Public Health, Lancaster University
From page 264...
... 264 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY SESSION 5 -- Translating Knowledge into Policy and Practice 8:40am Session 5 Objectives: • Develop a disruptive vision of environments that will create healthy longevity • Explore barriers and opportunities for translating knowledge on healthy longevity into policy and practice • Consider societal opportunities resulting from healthy longevity • Examine strategies to engage political leadership and build the business case to invest in policies and actions promoting healthy longevity • Highlight models of innovative collaboration, partnership, and coalitions across various contexts • Understand approaches to genuinely engaging with older adults from the research process through implementation and evaluation to ensure sustainable and effective solutions Moderator: PAULIN BASINGA, Co-Chair of the Workshop, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Nigeria Moderated Panel Discussion ANNA DIXON, Chief Executive, Centre for Ageing Better MALA KAPUR SHANKARDASS, Asia Representative, International Network for the Prevention of Elder Abuse ANGELIQUE CHAN, Executive Director, Centre for Ageing Research & Education, Singapore ENRIQUE VEGA, Unit Chief, Healthy Life Course Unit, Pan American Health Organization DEBRA WHITMAN, Chief Public Policy Officer, AARP General Discussion and Moderator Synthesis of Session 5 10:15am Break SESSION 6 -- Reflecting on Top Priorities for Research, Policy, and Practice 10:30am Session 6 Objectives: • Synthesize long-term vision, goals, and priorities for impact, collaboration, and synergy with global health initiatives such as Universal Health Coverage and the Sustainable Development Goals
From page 265...
... APPENDIX D 265 • Explore opportunities for developing new approaches to research, policy, and practice to enhance healthy longevity from the local to global levels • Discuss strategies to leverage cross-sectoral partnerships among various stakeholders from research to practice Moderator: LINDA FRIED, Columbia University Panel Presentations and Discussion XIAOYING ZHENG, Dean, APEC Health Science Academy, and Director, Institute of Population Research, Peking University SOMNATH CHATTERJI, Team Lead, Surveys, Measurement, and Analysis Programme, World Health Organization, Switzerland SIR GEORGE ALLEYNE, Director Emeritus, Pan American Health Organization MOSA MOSHABELA, Dean and Head, School of Nursing and Public Health, University of KwaZulu-Natal 11:30am Q&A and Final Synthesis Discussion Closing Remarks PAULIN BASINGA, Country Director of Nigeria, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation JENNIE POPAY, Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Public Health, Lancaster University 12:30pm Adjourn WORKSHOP 2 Health Care and Public Health Systems for Healthy Longevity: A Workshop for the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity Initiative National University Health System Tower Block 1E Kent Ridge Rd Singapore February 3–4, 2020 Objectives This 2-day public workshop will examine potential approaches and reforms across the entire spectrum of norms, institutions, and systems that provide healthand social-related services to address the multidimensional needs of older populations. Workshop participants will discuss the challenges and opportunities, as
From page 266...
... • Key successes and failures of policies and programs targeting access to and quality of health care, health promotion, and preventive services across the life course that affect healthy longevity. • Health financing and policy tools to guide effective multisectoral solu tions and actions to reform service delivery, public health systems, and community capacity in ways that will have a positive impact on aging.
From page 267...
... APPENDIX D 267 Opening remarks AMY KHOR, Senior Minister of State, Ministry of Environment and Water Resources & Ministry of Health An overview of the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity Initiative VICTOR DZAU, President, National Academy of Medicine Workshop overview, goals, and framework JOHN BEARD, ARC Centre for Excellence in Population Ageing Research, University of New South Wales SHARON INOUYE, Director, Aging Brain Center 9:10am Keynote Address FINBARR MARTIN, President, European Geriatric Medicine Society Q&A Discussion 10:00am Break SESSION 1 -- A Future-Back Vision of Health Care and Public Health Systems to Achieve Healthy Longevity 10:15am Session 1 Objectives: • Examine the possibilities of realigning systems to provide accessible, integrated, and personalized care across the life course in various contexts • Highlight opportunities in leadership, governance, and collaboration to disrupt the status quo and mobilize societal transformations toward a healthy longevity future Moderator: LINDA FRIED, Columbia University Presentations: Global trends of health and longevity across generations: Discussing the experiences of past and present generations and projecting the future characteristics of aging cohorts S JAY OLSHANSKY, Professor, University of Illinois Chicago Economics of health and aging in diverse societies and developmental contexts (balancing priorities to finance health and other actions for healthy longevity)
From page 268...
... 268 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY AVID CANNING, Professor of Population Sciences, Harvard D University Community-based approaches to longer, healthy lives CHARLENE CHANG, Group Director (Aging Planning Office) , Ministry of Health 11:15am Q&A Discussion 12:00pm Lunch SESSION 2 -- Maintaining the Robust Health of Aging People 1:00pm Session 2 Objectives: • Assess innovative strategies and interventions that promote health and prevent disease in various settings, including the homes, workplace, and built environments, to encourage well being and enhance the quality of life • Highlight salient enablers such as social cohesion, education, and workforce participation that promote healthy longevity across the life course • Examine approaches that ensure care providers have adequate training and tools to deliver and monitor health-promoting and preventive services for aging individuals that empower them to live in healthy, dignified, and meaningful ways • Understand the role and responsibilities of different stakeholders in investing and financing health promotion and prevention services at the community to national levels Session Lead: MOSA MOSHABELA Moderator: ALLISON SQUIRES Panel Discussion ALEX EZEH, Dornsife Professor of Global Health, Drexel University URSULA STAUDINGER, Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University ALANA OFFICER, Senior Health Adviser, World Health Organization 1:45pm Q&A Discussion 2:45pm Break
From page 269...
... APPENDIX D 269 SESSION 3 -- Supporting the Individual Needs of People with Declining Capacity 3:00pm Session 3 Objectives: • Consider contemporary challenges for quality health care service delivery, including enabling patient preferences, horizontal and vertical integration, workforce shortages, affordability, and accessibility • Highlight innovative health care models (including population based models) empowering transformative change from individual to community and system levels • Examine quality health care approaches that recognize person's autonomy and comprehensively measure health status and patient reported outcomes; maintain and improve individual capacity, and slow declines in health • Assess and enhance the quality of health care with the prevention of iatrogenic complications Session Lead: ISLENE ARAUJO DE CARVALHO Moderator: ENG-KIONG YEOH Panel Discussion: LEOCADIO RODRIGUEZ MAÑAS, Head, Service of Geriatrics, Hospital Universitario de Getafe MAGGIE KEEBLE, Clinical Lead, ICOPE Worcestershire, United Kingdom EKACHAI PIENSRIWATCHARA, Director, Bureau of Health Promotion, Department of Health DAVID LINDEMAN, Director of Health, Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society 3:45pm Q&A Discussion 4:45pm Concluding Discussions Observations and Reflections from Day 1 PAULIN BASINGA, Country Director, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Final Q&A 5:30pm Adjourn
From page 270...
... 270 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY Day 2 – Tuesday, February 4 8:30am Welcome and Recap Day 1 SHARON INOUYE, Director, Aging Brain Center JOHN BEARD, ARC Centre for Excellence in Population Ageing Research, University of New South Wales SESSION 4 -- Expanding Personalized Care for People with Significant Capacity Loss 8:45am Session 4 Objectives: • Explore challenges and opportunities to integrate long-term care and social care from the community to national levels • Elucidate critical transformations required to establish, implement, and finance integrated care, including societal norms and social status, skills gaps and shortages, and compensation • Emphasize the critical rights of care recipients and providers in maintaining and improving their health and well-being, autonomy, and dignity • Identify disruptive technologies and social innovations to empower intergenerational solidarity and social inclusion throughout individual health trajectories Session Lead: EDUARDO KLIEN, HelpAge International Moderator: BENT GREVE, Roskilde University Panel Discussion: FINBARR MARTIN, President, European Geriatric Medicine Society ANNE MARGRIET POT, Strategic Advisor, Care for Older People, Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport ADELINA COMAS-HERRERA, Assistant Professorial Research Fellow, Care Policy and Evaluation Centre THUY BICH TRAN, Country Director, HelpAge International 9:30am Q&A Discussion 10:25am Break
From page 271...
... APPENDIX D 271 SESSION 5 -- Translating Knowledge into Policy and Practice 10:40am Session 5 Objectives: • Explore system-wide barriers and opportunities for translating knowledge on healthy longevity into policy and practice • Consider societal and economic opportunities resulting from healthy longevity • Examine strategies to engage political leadership and build the business case to invest in research and development, that lead to policies and actions promoting healthy longevity • Highlight models of innovative collaboration, partnership, and coalitions across various contexts and sectors to increase translation of research in healthy aging into policies • Understand approaches to genuinely engaging with older adults from the research process through implementation and evaluation to ensure sustainable and effective solutions Session Lead: KENJI SHIBUYA, King's College London Moderator: JEANETTE VEGA, Red de Salud UC-Christus Panel Discussion: ROBERT GREENWOOD, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs, National PACE Association TINA WOODS, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Longevity International KAZUMI NISHIKAWA, Director, Healthcare Industries Division, Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry K SRINATH REDDY, President, Public Health Foundation 11:25am Q&A Discussion 12:20pm Lunch PRE-SESSION 6 -- Recapping Workshop Discussions 1:20pm Pre-Session 6 Objectives: • Present and review highlights from the preceding workshop sessions and discussions • Discuss topics, themes, and issues essential to forming a system for achieving healthy longevity with equity at its center for all people
From page 272...
... 272 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY • Identify and discuss gaps in knowledge and perspectives to solidify the knowledge base of the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity initiative and report Moderator: BRIDGET KELLY Session I: LINDA FRIED Session II: MOSA MOSHABELA and ALLISON SQUIRES Session III: ISLENE ARAUJO DE CARVALHO and EK YEOH Session IV: EDUARDO KLIEN and BENT GREVE Session V: KENJI SHIBUYA and JEANETTE VEGA 2:00pm Q&A Discussion 2:30pm Break SESSION 6 -- Envisioning a System of Health and Well-Being for All 2:45pm Session 6 Objectives: • Use the lens of four diverse global perspectives to kick off a discussion of how to design ideal future systems that will enhance healthy longevity • Build on the preceding sessions to identify where ideas for a future vision have converged from the workshop and where there remain uncertainties and differences in perspectives or priorities • Catalyze a discussion of how the creation of such a future system for healthy longevity can be driven by:  º  synergy with global health initiatives, such as Universal Health Coverage, the Decade for Healthy Ageing, and the Sustainable Development Goals º integration among knowledge, policies, and actions opportunities for developing new approaches to research, policy, and practice from the local to global levels º strategies to leverage cross-sectoral partnerships and evidence among various stakeholders from research to practice • Identify likely key challenges or barriers and elicit suggestions for priority steps to be taken in the near, medium, and long term Session Lead and Moderator: JOHN BEARD Panel Discussion: LUIS MIGUEL GUTIÉRREZ ROBLEDO, Director General, Instituto Nacional de Geriatria
From page 273...
... Approaches to expanding research funding and incentivizing research in the area will also be examined. Discussions may include • mechanisms of aging and regeneration, tissue destruction and repair, and cellular death and survival with a focus on corrective interventions using both conventional means with small molecules and antibodies and emerging therapeutic modalities using cells, genes, nucleic acids, and designer proteins; • advances in information technologies including the development of large databases, machine learning, and artificial intelligence tools that will inform approaches to therapeutic interventions but also to enhancing quality of life; • emerging engineering technologies based on software and mechanical design that hold promise for monitoring the health and activity of the elderly as well as enhancing their mobility and functionality to help them continue to live productive lives; and
From page 274...
... Proceedings of the workshop discussions will be prepared by a designated rapporteur in accordance with institutional guidelines as part of a three workshop series on healthy longevity. Day 1 – Tuesday, June 15 5:00pm Welcome Remarks VICTOR DZAU, President, National Academy of Medicine Workshop Overview, Goals, and Framework ANN AERTS, Co-Chair of the Workshop, Head of Novartis Foundation TACHI YAMADA, Co-Chair of the Workshop, Venture Partner, Frazier Healthcare Partners SESSION 1 -- Transformative Advances in Biological Sciences for Healthy Longevity 5:10pm Session 1 Objectives: • Explore critical biological mechanisms of aging and their implications for predicting, preventing, diagnosing, and treating disease across diverse populations • Consider emerging scientific advances enabling a healthy longevity future for individuals and societies • Discuss knowledge gaps needing research which will create opportunities for advancing science in the longevity field Plenary Keynote ERIC VERDIN, The Buck Institute 5:30pm Expert Discussion Moderator: TACHI YAMADA 6:50pm Conclusion 7:00pm Break
From page 275...
... APPENDIX D 275 SESSION 2 -- Transformative Advances in Technologies for Aging Societies 7:15pm Session 2 Objectives: • Describe existing technology and engineering innovations enabling people to function within their physical and social environments • Explore the potential of emerging technology and engineering developments to promote better health and well-being across the life course • Highlight critical gaps in technology and engineering research and development, focusing on cocreated and problem-driven solutions Plenary Keynote Speaker: JOE COUGHLIN, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, AgeLab 7:35pm Expert Discussion Moderator: MEHMOOD KHAN, Life BioSciences, Inc. 8:55pm Conclusion Day 2 – Thursday, June 17 9:00am Welcome and Recap of Day 1 TACHI YAMADA, Venture Partner, Frazier Healthcare Partners SESSION 3 -- Implementing Advances in Science and Technology to Enable Healthy Longevity 9:05am Session 3 Objectives: • Identify successful deployment and scaling of science and technology in building accessible, equitable, and health promoting living environments • Discuss strategies to finance and build infrastructure while ensuring public participation in building science- and technology-enabled societies • Further discuss actions to reform research and development ecosystems to break down silos and encourage holistic systems approaches • Consider the ethical, equity, and accessibility implications of science and technology, including strategies to prevent and mitigate negative outcomes such as the digital divide
From page 276...
... 276 GLOBAL ROADMAP FOR HEALTHY LONGEVITY Plenary Keynote MICHELE GRIMM, Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Michigan State University 9:25am Expert Discussion Moderator: ANN AERTS, Novartis Foundation 10:45am Conclusion 11:00am Break Session 4 -- Opportunities and Gaps in Science and Technology 11:15am Welcome and Overview Moderator: TACHI YAMADA, Frazier Capital Partners 11:20am Visionary Statements on Opportunities and Gaps TOM CHEUNG, Professor, Division of Life Science, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 11:30am ELENA BONFIGLIOLI, Managing Director Health and Life Sciences, Microsoft 11:40am SELINA SEAH, Director, Centre for Healthcare Assistive and Robotics Technology 11:50am Expert Discussion Moderators: ANN AERTS and TACHI YAMADA 12:50pm Conclusion and Final Remarks ANN AERTS 1:00pm Adjourn


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