UMASS BOSTON GERONTOLOGY NEWS

MARCH 2024

UMass Boston's Center for Social and Demographic Research on Aging holds a community meeting. The center is partnering with the Center for Retirement Research on a new grant that draws on its extensive network to engage and recruit individuals and organizations from Greater Boston’s Black and Hispanic communities.

UMass Boston joins BC's Center for Retirement Research as affiliate

UMass Boston has begun a five-year partnership with the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College as an affiliated research institution, a collaboration that opens opportunities for UMass Boston researchers and students. In the first year of the partnership, two UMass Boston gerontology research projects have won funding from the Social Security Administration and three paid summer research fellowship positions have been created exclusively for UMass Boston undergraduates.

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Doctoral candidate Shu Xu, right, and her grandfather in China, left, who inspired her research into sensory impairment and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Older adults with sensory impairments showed resilience during pandemic

When her own vision problems and her grandfather's hearing difficulties created communication challenges between Boston and China, gerontology doctoral candidate Shu Xu shaped a research study, “Sensory Impairment and Depressive Symptoms Among Older Adults Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic,” comparing 2018 and 2020 data. The study, published in Aging & Mental Health, found that although older Americans with sensory impairments reported more depressive symptoms than those without sensory impairments, the difference between the two groups was reduced during the pandemic compared to before the pandemic.


“The pandemic kind of leveled the playing field,” Xu says. “People with sensory impairment had already experienced communication and logistical challenges, so they may have had some coping strategies in place."

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Post COVID, how will states invest in Medicaid home and community-based services?

In 2021, a one-year increase of the Medicaid matching rate for home and community-based services was part of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act economic relief and recovery package. But subsequent attempts to extend the increased funding have stalled in Congress. The temporary nature of the boost and the lack of a uniform mandate to expand programs will likely increase inequities among states, argues Edward Alan Miller, PhD, in a new article in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law.

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UMASS BOSTON GERONTOLOGY IN THE NEWS


"I cannot bring my wife home," Boston25 News talks with Edward Miller about plans to close Boston's Benjamin Healthcare Center nursing home, March 7, 2024. A follow-up story ran the next day.


"Nearing 80, she can no longer afford to own Arcadia's Book Rack—or live in California," Los Angeles Times cites Elder Index cost of living figures, February 26, 2024.


"Senior Whole Health invests $500,000 in place-based supports to reduce health disparities for seniors," BusinessWire story on Massachusetts affordable housing sites for older adults cites Elder Index statistics, February 14, 2024.


"Why local advocates want to 'end loneliness' in Massachusetts," Boston.com looks at work of Caitlin Coyle and others leading the Coalition to Build Community and End Loneliness, February 12, 2024.

Gerontology Institute at University of Massachusetts Boston
Wheatley Hall 3rd Floor, Room 124A
UMass Boston,100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125


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