|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration has awarded The University of Alabama a
$500,000 grant to create a research center focusing on the
mental health needs of the nation’s soaring elderly
population.
UA researchers are already involved in millions of dollars of
federally funded research projects designed to assist the
elderly and those who care for them. The new Center for Mental
Health and Aging at UA will assist in coordinating and expanding
these efforts that range from improving the well-being of
caregivers of Alzheimer’s patients, to helping the rural
elderly overcome the specific obstacles they face in obtaining
mental health care, and to improving the quality of care in
nursing homes.
“We’re hoping to develop a focal point on the UA campus
where researchers and practitioners of all disciplines concerned
with mental health and aging can study, learn and teach
together,” said Dr. Lucinda Roff, a professor of social work
who will co-direct the center.
Although the Center is sponsored by the College
of Arts and Sciences and the School
of Social Work, faculty and students from various
disciplines will be involved, including the College
of Nursing, the Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration and the College
of Community Health Sciences.
The UA Center was designed to compliment the existing Center
for Aging at UAB which focuses more on biomedical issues in
aging. The two Centers are already combining their respective
expertise and collaborating on numerous research projects.
Dr. Louis Burgio, professor of psychology and also director
of UA’s Applied
Gerontology Program, will co-direct the new
interdisciplinary center.
“If you want to effectively address problems in aging, you
have to understand it from an interdisciplinary approach,”
said Burgio. “The issues are multi-faceted.” For example, if
a nursing home patient with a degenerative condition begins
exhibiting behavior problems, those developing a solution to the
problem have much to consider.
“It helps to have a psychology or social work background to
understand environmental influences,” Burgio said, “but also
medicine and nursing are obviously relevant.”
In America, the population age 65 and older is expected to
double by 2030. At that rate, this group is projected to
comprise 20 percent of the population while utilizing 50 percent
of the nation’s health care resources. Alabama residents 65
and older numbered about 580,000 in 2000. By 2025, that number
is projected to be near one million, according to UA’s Center
for Business and Economic Research.
This tremendous increase in the graying population of America
has led to increased research in all areas of aging, and The
University of Alabama has emerged as one of the nation’s
leaders for studies on aging.
“We want the center to be very user-friendly and to have
real-life applications,” Roff said. “We hope to be able to
provide service to, and have interaction with, practitioners in
Alabama, so we can be aware of what their needs are, and so we
can share what’s known throughout the world about the best
practices.
“Also, we’re training and developing new leaders for the
future among our own graduate students in social work and
psychology and other helping fields who will be strong scholars
and practitioners to serve future generations of older
people.”
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration, often referred to by its acronym SAMHSA, is a
public health agency within the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services. These funds were provided to assist in the
start-up of the new Center. The continuation of the Center will
be dependent on a combination of funds from federal grants and
private donations.
|