Call for 2024-2025 HAPF Applicants Now Open!

Are you committed to improving health and aging?
Are you interested in learning about policymaking to increase your impact? 
 
If so, we invite you to apply to join the next class of 
Health and Aging Policy Fellows!

The 2022-2023 Health and Aging Policy Fellows at The White House in Washington, DC

As a Health and Aging Policy Fellow, you have the opportunity to join a dynamic community of nearly 200 Fellows who are committed to improving health and quality of life for older Americans. 

 

The one-year Fellowship runs from October 1 – September 30 and has full-time and part-time tracks. It is conducted as a hybrid program of mentoring, networking, learning and practicum experiences. Health and Aging Policy Fellows work across diverse fields of aging, and develop lifelong partnerships and networks. Individually and collectively, they are improving the lives of older adults around the country.


Click here to learn more about Fellows' recent placement experiences and accomplishments.

Apply here!

2022-2023 Health and Aging Policy Fellows at their Spring Symposium in Washington, DC

THE PROGRAM


The Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program aims to create a cadre of leaders who will serve as change agents in health and aging policy to ultimately improve the health care of older adults. The year-long fellowship offers a rich and unique training and enrichment program that is focused on current policy issues, communication skills development, and professional networking opportunities to provide Fellows with the experience and skills necessary to help affect policy.



PROGRAM TRACKS 


The Residential track includes a year-long placement in Washington, DC or at a state agency. Residential Fellows are immersed full-time in a policy-focused placement that is determined in the initial phase of the fellowship. Placements may include working as a legislative assistant in Congress, as professional staff in executive agencies, or with 'think tank' organizations, for example. 

 

The Non-Residential track allows Fellows to remain at their home institutions and requires that they dedicate at least 20% of their time to a "virtual" placement and/or project with federal agencies, Congressional offices, or health and aging policy organizations. This may involve short periods of travel throughout the year to relevant sites. Non-residential Fellows may focus on a health policy project that is global, federal, state, city, or community-based. 


The VA Track is a specific non-residential track for VA staff to represent the Department of Veterans Affairs as a VA/Health and Aging Policy Fellow. VA/Health and Aging Policy Fellow participate through the non-residential track of the fellowship.


The Caregiver Policy Track enables Fellows based in Western New York and Southeastern Michigan to become effective advocates and help shape and implement family caregiving policies at the state and federal levels that would improve the lives of caregivers and those they care for.



Fellows can engage at many levels of policymaking – global, federal, state, community – through The Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program. The fellowship experience is enhanced by our partnerships with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), University of Washington, Northwestern University, and most recently with The Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center at the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. By participating in the fellowship, Fellows will not only expand their own professional networks - they will also serve to strengthen the network of professionals in that community working in the field.


 

IMPORTANT NOTE: Both residential and non-residential Fellows are required to attend the 6-week Orientation in Washington, DC at the beginning of their fellowship, from the end of October to the beginning of December. Nothing is scheduled during the week of Thanksgiving. Fellows are also brought together periodically over the course of the fellowship year for HAPF Program events.   



WHO SHOULD APPLY?


The program has a broad interdisciplinary focus, and Fellowship cohorts have included physicians, nurses, social workers, psychologists, food scientists, city planners, healthcare administrators, epidemiologists, economists, and lawyers from academic and practice settings, spanning career stages from newly minted PhDs to senior professors and community leaders. Applicants must have a strong commitment to health and aging issues, and should specify how the program would meet their particular career goals. Applicants must also be U.S. citizens or permanent residents of the U.S. who have career plans that anticipate continued work in the U.S. after the fellowship period. Candidates from underrepresented groups are especially encouraged to apply.

Apply here!

APPLICATION KEY DATES


  • Submission deadline: Monday, April 15, 2024
  • Notification of finalists to be interviewed: Mid-May 
  • Interviews and selection of Fellows: Mid-June to Mid-July
  • Fellowship begins October 1, 2024

Information Sessions for the 2024-2025 Fellowship Year


If you are interested in becoming a Health and Aging Policy Fellow and have questions, we are holding information sessions via Zoom on various dates from now through March 2023. 


The schedule is as follows (in EST):

  • Wednesday, December 13, 2023 from 12–1 PM
  • Friday, January 12, 2024 from 2–3 PM
  • *Thursday, February 1, 2024 from 2–3 PM - *Session focused on the VA track
  • Wednesday, March 13, 2024 from 12–1 PM
  • Wednesday, March 27, 2023 from 1–2 PM


Click here to register for a session.


To arrange a call with the Program Director or Deputy Director, or to discuss applicant eligibility or the application specifically, please contact the Program Coordinator at [email protected].

For more information about The Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program:
Visit our website
Contact us
Follow us on Twitter
The fellowship is made possible with the commitment and generous support of our funders. Over the years, we have deepened our collaboration with The John A. Hartford Foundation, who partnered with Atlantic Philanthropies to broaden and extend the fellowship program; and with West Health, who has been essential to establishing and expanding our alumni program. We have also further developed our partnerships with the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), University of Washington, Northwestern University, and The Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center, among others.