Penn Population Scientists Win NAM Catalyst Grant Award

Kohler picture

A team led by Iliana Kohler, Assistant Research Professor and Associate Director of the Population Studies Center and a Senior Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute for Health Economics, has won a National Academy of Medicine (NAM) Healthy Longevity Global Grand Challenge Catalyst Award supporting aging and health-related research in Malawi, Africa. Entitled "Leveraging Social Networks and Linkage to Care to Foster Healthy Aging in a Low-Income Context," the Kohler project is in keeping with the international scope of the NAM program, which gave Catalyst Awards to research teams in the U.S., U.K, European Union, Israel, Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, and Tanzania.

Since 2010, Kohler has been studying aging and health in Malawi, Africa. The Malawi project is one of 124 receiving Catalyst Awards in the first round of NAM's new program. The proposed aging research work is an offshoot of the Malawi Longitudinal Study of Families and Health, which has been run by Penn's Population Studies Center and Population Aging Research Center for two decades.

"Our study population in Malawi broadly represents the living conditions of large numbers of individuals living in poor sub-Saharan countries, so the relevance of our work extends beyond Malawi," explains Kohler.

The Penn team's Catalyst work is aimed at understanding how social networksphysical rather than electronic networkscould be used to more effectively disseminate elder health information about non-communicable diseases throughout a country lacking the mass communications infrastructure of industrialized nations.

Founded by NAM and launched in December of 2019 in collaboration with the National Institute on Aging, the Healthy Longevity Global Grand Challenge Catalyst program is essentially a global innovation tournament designed to accelerate scientific advances related to health care and the elderly.

Click here to read the full release.

 

Arts & Sciences News

Wale Adebanwi and Deborah A. Thomas Named 2024 Guggenheim Fellows

The award is designed to allow independent work at the highest level under “the freest possible conditions.”

View Article >
2024 College of Arts & Sciences Graduation Speakers

James “Jim” Johnson, C’74, L’77, LPS ’21, a School of Arts and Sciences Board of Advisors member, and student speaker Katie Volpert, C’24, will address the Class of 2024 Sunday May 19 on Franklin Field.

View Article >
Undergraduate and Graduate Students Honored as 2024 Dean’s Scholars

This honor is presented annually to students who exhibit exceptional academic performance and intellectual promise.

View Article >
Azuma and Hart Named Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professors of American History

Eiichiro Azuma specializes in Asian American and transpacific history, while Emma Hart teaches and researches the history of early North America, the Atlantic World, and early modern Britain between 1500 and 1800.

View Article >
Arts & Sciences Students Honored during 37th Annual Women of Color Day

Sade Taiwo, C’25, and Kyndall Nicholas, a Ph.D. candidate in neuroscience, were honored for their work.

View Article >
Nine College Students and Alums Named Thouron Scholars; Will Pursue Graduate Studies in the U.K.

The Scholars are six seniors and three recent graduates whose majors range from neuroscience to communication.

View Article >