- Paul S. Aisen
- Paul Aisen is Professor of Neurology and Medicine and Director of the
Memory Disorders Program at the Georgetown School of Medicine. Trained as
a rheumatologist, his research interest focuses on inflammatory mechanisms
in the brain, and the development of new treatment strategies for neurodegenerative
diseases. He is currently directing a number of NIH-funded multicenter therapeutic
trials. Dr. Aisen has published more than seventy scientific articles and
book chapters, primarily on the subject of Alzheimer's disease.
- Robert Friedland
- Robert Friedland is Associate Research Professor at Georgetown University
and the founding director of the Center on an Aging Society. Friedland has
had a wide range of research and public policy experience, including Chief
Economist for Maryland's Medicaid program; Senior Research Associate at
the Employee Benefit Research Institute; Director of the American Assocation
of Retired Person's Public Policy Institute; Research Director, National
Academy of Social Insurance; and Economist on the staff of the U.S. Bipartisan
Commission on Comprehensive Health Care, better known as the Pepper Commission.
Friedand has written on issues pertaining to the financing and delivery
of health care and long-term care and retirement income security. His book,
Facing the Costs of Long-Term Care, was awarded the 1992 Elizur
Wright Award by the American Risk and Insurance Association.
Friedland is on the board of the National Academy for State Health Policy,
the Long-Term Care Education Foundation, and the Editorial Board of Aging
Today. Friedland received his doctorate in Economics from the George
Washington University in 1983.
- Melissa I. Figueiredo
- Melissa I. Figueiredo completed her graduate work at Virginia Commonwealth
University (M.S., Ph.D) in Counseling Psychology. She recently completed
a one-year clinical internship at Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical
Center, Chicago, IL. She has been newly hired as a post-doctorate and project
coordinator in the Cancer Control Program at the Lombardi Cancer Center.
Her primary responsibilities include the implementation of a large-scale
federal grant under the leadership of Jeanne Mandelblatt, MD, MPH. This
study will examine chemotherapy decision-making in elderly women with breast
cancer. Her major research interests include coping, communication, social
relationships, and quality of life in women with breast cancer.
- Darlene Howard
- Darlene Howard's research investigates which cognitive and neural systems
decline, and which are spared, in the course of aging. Her current work
focuses primarily on healthy aging and on implicit forms of learning and
memory, i.e., those occurring without conscious awareness or intention.
This work is funded by a MERIT award from the National Institute on Aging.
She and her students, in collaboration with colleagues at the Catholic University
of America (James Howard, Jr.) and Georgetown (Paul Aisen, Chandan Vaidya)
have also begun to examine how learning is affected by the early stages
of Alzheimer's' disease and how to use fMRI techniques to study
the brain mechanisms underlying age-related changes in learning. She is
interested in developing collaborations which investigate more applied forms
of learning and memory in healthy and pathological aging. Examples include
learning second languages, learning how to use new technologies, and relearning
skills and language following brain damage such as that due to stroke.
She currently serves on the editorial boards of Psychology and Aging,
Experimental Aging Research, and Aging, Neuropsychology &
Cognition. She is Director of Georgetown's Interdisciplinary Program
in Cognitive Science which offers a minor to undergraduates, and she is
Co-Director of the Psychology Department's new graduate program in Developmental
Science which offers concentrations in Lifespan Cognitive Neuroscience and
in Human Development and Public Policy.
- Jeanne Mandelblatt
- Dr. Mandelblatt is Professor of Oncology and Medicine at Georgetown University
Medical Center, and the Director of Cancer Control Program. She is also
Director of Cancer and Aging and Cancer Outcomes Research at Lombardi Cancer
Center. Dr. Mandelblatt is a geriatrician with training in cancer epidemiology
and health services research, and has worked on the clinical, behavioral,
and economic aspects of cancer control in older women.
Dr. Mandelblatt has conducted more than a decade of research on issues in
access to screening and treatment for breast and cervical cancer among older
black women. A major accomplishment of Dr. Mandelblatt's screening work
was the inclusion of triennial Pap smears as the first early detection effort
covered for Medicare beneficiaries. Dr. Mandelblatt has also conducted research
to demonstrate that mammography continues to save life for women after age
65, even in the presence of co-existent medical conditions. Dr. Mandelblatt
was a Principal Investigator of the AHCPR-funded PORT evaluating the patterns
of care, outcomes, and cost-effectiveness of treatment of early stage disease
among newly diagnosed elderly older black and white women.
She is currently conducting a five-year, NIA-funded evaluation of chemotherapy
use in older women with breast cancer. This project is being conducted in
conjunction with the Cancer and Leukemia Group B cooperative group.
In other work, Dr. Mandelblatt served as a member of the expert panel on
"Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine" (1993-1997). Dr. Mandelblatt
is also leading two NIH-funded grants to examine cost-effectiveness of cancer
screening in older, and older African-American women, and one DOD-funded
grant to establish a Clinical Outcomes Core at Lombardi.
In future research, Dr. Mandelblatt is planning to explore the biology of
breast cancer and aging.
- Madison Powers
- Madison Powers is a lawyer with a doctorate in moral and political philosophy
from University College Oxford University. His research interests include
distributive justice and health care resource allocation, ethical issues
in genetics and reproductive decision-making, ethical and legal issues of
privacy protection, and the theoretical foundations of utility theory, welfare
economics, and health policy analysis. Dr. Powers has taught at Vanderbilt
School of Law, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, and is
currently Director and Senior Research Scholar at the Kennedy Institute
of Ethics and Associate Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University.
He has written numerous articles in legal, philosophical and public policy
journals and is co-editor, with Ruth Faden and Gail Geller, of AIDS,
Women and the Next Generation. With co-investigator Ruth Faden, he
is the recipient of a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Investigator Award.
Drs. Powers and Faden are working on a book on markets and other methods
of health care allocation policies with special attention to their impact
on the most vulnerable members of society. Dr. Powers currently chairs the
National Advisory Committee of the Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Investigators
Award Program, and he has served as a consultant or committee member for
national organizations including the National Institutes of Health, the
Institute of Medicine, the Office of Technology Assessment, the Department
of Energy, and the Privacy Work Group of President Clinton's Health
care Task Force.
- Steven R. Sabat
- Steven R. Savat is Professor of Psychology at Georgetown University. He
earned his doctorate at the City University of New York, where he specialized
in Neuropsychology. The main focus of his research has been the intact cognitive
and social abilities (including aspects of selfhood) of Alzheimer's
disease sufferers in the moderate-to-severe stages of the disease, the experience
of having the disease from the sufferer's point of view, and the ways
in which communication between the afflicted and their caregivers may be
enhanced. In additions, his interests include issues surrounding the epistemological
basis of our understanding of the effects of brain injury on human beings.
He has explored all of these issues in numerous scientific journal articles
and in his recent book, The Experience of Alzheimer's Disease:
Life Through a Tangled Veil (Blackwell, 2001).
- Pamela Saunders
- Pamela A. Saunders is an Assistant Professor in the Neurology Department
at the Georgetown University School of Medicine. She is also on the faculty
of the Interdisciplinary Neuroscience program at Georgetown University.
She has an MA in Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania and a PhD
in Sociolinguistics from Georgetown University. Her research interests include
communication, aging, and Alzheimer's disease. She has authored several
articles on doctor/older patient communication. Currently she is implementing
curriculum with medical students about how to communicate with older patients.
- Rochelle E. Tractenberg
- Rochelle Tractenberg is a Research Assistant Professor in the Center for
Population and Health at Georgetown University. She earned an MA in Social
Sciences and a PhD in Cognitive Science/Psychology at the University of
California, Irvine, and went on to study Biostatistics to earn the M.P.H.
from California State University at San Diego. Dr. Tractenberg worked for
five years as a biostatistician and scientist with a large national Alzheimer's
disease research consortium, and authored or co-authored more than 20 articles,
chapters and posters on various aspects of Alzheimer's disease, from
quality of life to clinical interventions to instrumentation and methodology.
Prior to jointing the Alzheimer's research community, Dr. Tractenberg
worked in the area of reading and reading development in hearing and deaf
persons. Her current areas of interest include psychiatric epidemiology,
reading and reading development, research methodology, and neuropsychological
issues in Alzheimer's disease and aging.
- Diane Yeager
- Diane Yeager was awarded a PhD in Religion and Culture by Duke University
in 1981 and is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Theology
at Georgetown University. Her primary specialization is in the field of
religious ethics, but she also teaches courses concerning the intersection
of religious studies and social theory and courses in philosophical theology
(with special emphasis on the impact of scientific knowledge on religious
beliefs and theological suppositions). In the filed of religious ethics,
her work has focused on Christian ethics, moral psychology, and moral epistemology.
From 1987 to 1991 she edited the Annual of the Society of Christian
Ethics (recently renamed the Journal of the Society of Christian
Ethics), and from 1991 to 2001, she served as the general editor of
The Journal of Religious Ethics. Her current research interests include
the bearing of sociological changes and scientific findings on the evolution
of moral consensus, and the correlation of age-related shifts in the needs,
interests, and value that govern action with the cultivation of the moral
virtues necessary to temper those inclinations. Dr. Yeager will serve as
a rotating co-principal investigator on this project.




