top of page
pexels-jopwell-2422293.jpg
Tuesday, February 27 : 3 – 4pm EST

This webinar is an opportunity to hear from MassAITC pilot projects currently underway in the space of new approaches for the detection of cognitive and functional impairment.



Webinar Overview:

I.                    “Introduction to the problems in detection and opportunities for novel technologies, algorithms, and approaches” by Dr. Kathryn Papp, PhD, Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School; Clinical Neuropsychologist, Brigham and Women's Hospital (5 min) 

II.                  Pilot Presentations (10min/each pilot for 30min total) 

  1. Erik Larsen, PhD, SVP Clinical Development & Customer Success, Sonde Health

“Testing a Vocal Biomarker Platform for Detection and Monitoring of Cognitive Impairment”

  1. Jennifer Stamps, PhD, Director of Research, Rendever, Inc. 

“Expanding a Multimodal VR Fitness Platform to Remotely Assess, Monitor, and Report Cognitive and   Physical Function for Older Adults”

  1. Mike Milburn, PhD, CSO and Founder, Impairment Science, Inc., Professor of Psychology, University of Massachusetts/Boston (retired)

    “Utilizing the Druid Impairment App to Assess and Enhance Senior Adult's Driving Performance”  

III.                Q&A and Discussion Lead by Kathryn Papp and Rhoda Au, PhD, Professor of Anatomy & Neurobiology, Neurology, Medicine and Epidemiology Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine and School of Public Health (25 min)







Thursday, February 15, 2024 @ 12:00 – 1:00 pm ET





Discussant

Stacy Fisher, MD

Professor, Medicine-Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus 

Presenter

Laura Hanson, MD, MPH

Professor of Medicine,

University of North Carolina School of Medicine 





Presenter

Hillary Lum, MD, PhD

Associate Professor, Medicine-Geriatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

Presenter

Lilliana Ramirez- Gomez, MD 

Clinical Director, Memory Disorders Division, Massachusetts General Hospital 


The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will host a free public one and a half-day workshop on Aging, Functioning, and Rehabilitation, on Friday, 16 February and Saturday, 17 February 2024 at the University of Lucerne in Lucerne, Switzerland. Public attendees may join in person or via a live webcast.

The workshop will facilitate a discussion focused on the World Health Organization's concept of functioning and its role in rethinking the concept of health, with a focus on healthy aging and the future of rehabilitation as a health strategy.


The workshop will feature invited presentations and panel discussions on topics such as:
  • The World Health Organization’s concept of functioning in the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF);

  • Moving beyond traditional health outcome measures and operationalizing functioning as a measure of health;

  • Standardizing and routinely collecting functioning data in health information systems;

  • Ways to integrate functioning into public health strategies for healthy aging and healthy longevity;

  • Disability from the perspective of functioning: a universal human experience as well as a discrete social group seeking equity;

  • Epidemiology of functioning: the consequences of using functioning as the third health indicator augmenting mortality and morbidity;

  • How demographic and epidemiological projections are shaping the future of public health in the context of functioning;

  • Conceptualizing and operationalizing rehabilitation as the health strategy that aims to optimize functioning, which could serve as the basis for scaling rehabilitation in the 21st century;

  • Functioning and person-centered care: the lived experience of health;

  • Functioning and value-based health care.


bottom of page