At the 2024 Optimal Aging Conference, Charles Booker, Kentucky state director of faith-based and community initiatives, emphasized the need to listen to those directly impacted by services and policies. UofL photo.
At the 2024 Optimal Aging Conference, Charles Booker, Kentucky state director of faith-based and community initiatives, emphasized the need to listen to those directly impacted by services and policies. UofL photo.

Health care and social service professionals, academics, older adults and caregivers gathered in Louisville in April to focus on issues of health equity for older adults at the 2024 Optimal Aging Conference.

“Health equity is essential to improving the aging journey for everyone in our community. We must view health holistically, accounting for the social determinants that impact one’s health and working to address each of them with patients so they can flourish,” said Anna Faul, executive director of the UofL Trager Institute/Republic Bank Foundation Optimal Aging Clinic. “It felt necessary for health equity to be our theme this year, especially with the growing aging population in the U.S. and the recent challenges to DEI initiatives.” 

The Trager Institute/Optimal Aging Clinic and the Kentucky Association of Gerontology hosted the conference, held in person for the first time since 2019.

As the opening keynote speaker, Kentucky State Director of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives Charles Booker set the tone and mission of the conference, emphasizing the need to listen to the voices of those directly impacted by services and policies and the importance of strengthening community relationships.

Other keynote sessions included an update on Alzheimer’s and dementia research from Gregory Jicha, professor of neurology at the University of Kentucky; a call to action for women’s caregiver roles and health disparities from Sam Cotton, associate professor at the UofL Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine; a panel on health equity and aging policy with Bob Blancato, executive director of the National Association of Nutrition and Aging Services Programs and Sandy Markwood, CEO of the National Association of Area Agencies on Aging; and a panel of six octogenarians and nonagenarians who shared insights on aging optimally.

The nearly 300 attendees also had the opportunity to participate in sessions on animal-assisted therapy, the benefits of adult day care, lifestyle medicine for preventing dementia, ageism, expansion of senior center services, mental health challenges in older adults and other topics.

“The Optimal Aging Conference was an enlightening and rewarding experience. Participants were able to journey through the landscapes of aging and health equity with every keynote and workshop presentation they attended. This conference reinforced my belief that, by embracing inclusivity and understanding, we can make every year of life a rich and fulfilling adventure for everyone,” said Barbara Gordon, director of community engagement for the Trager Institute/Optimal Aging Clinic.   

The annual conference aims to transform preconceptions about aging, hoping to ignite conversations in which aging is viewed as an opportunity rather than a disease. For more details and information about the 2025 event, visit the conference web page.

By Samantha Adams, UofL Trager Institute