Alliance for Aging Research
Catalyzing Innovation for Healthy Aging
Programs and results
What we aim to solve
The Alliance believes that advances in research help people live longer, happier, more productive lives and reduce health care costs over the long term and that access to the latest scientific information empowers people to take control of their health.
Our programs
What are the organization's current programs, how do they measure success, and who do the programs serve?
Health Education
The Alliance for Aging Research creates award-winning educational materials and leads campaigns for consumers, patients, caregivers, and health professionals on diseases and conditions which disproportionately impact older adults. These wide-ranging sources on such topics as valve disease, sarcopenia, and neuropsychiatric symptoms have made the Alliance a well-respected source of reliable information on the health and well-being of older Americans.
Public Policy
The Alliance for Aging Research partners with the government, private and corporate policy makers, and other nonprofit organizations to promote research and develop programs focused on the aging population. With the mission to help improve the health and well-being of older adults, their families and caregivers, and the communities in which they live, the Alliance guides efforts to increase aging research funding, build influential coalitions, and spearhead efforts to guide groundbreaking regulatory advancements and public policies.
Where we work
Videos
Our results
How does this organization measure their results? It's a hard question but an important one.
Number of new advocates recruited
This metric is no longer tracked.Totals By Year
Population(s) Served
Older adults, Seniors, Caregivers, Researchers
Related Program
Health Education
Type of Metric
Output - describing our activities and reach
Direction of Success
Holding steady
Context Notes
Number of patients, family caregivers, researchers, and clinicians trained on PCOR through the Alliance's Talk NERDY to Me training program.
Our Sustainable Development Goals
Learn more about Sustainable Development Goals.
Goals & Strategy
Learn about the organization's key goals, strategies, capabilities, and progress.
Charting impact
Four powerful questions that require reflection about what really matters - results.
What is the organization aiming to accomplish?
The Alliance for Aging Research aims to accelerate the pace of scientific discoveries and their application to vastly improve the universal human experience of aging and health. America's science, innovation, and public spirit have the potential to avert the social and fiscal chaos that might otherwise accompany a "silver tsunami" of age-related diseases and lost productivity. The Alliance for Aging Research seeks to realize this potential and establish "healthy aging research" as a priority for our country as a whole. The advances we seek will make 85 years for most people look and feel like 65 today.
What are the organization's key strategies for making this happen?
The Alliances strives to advance science and enhance lives through a variety of activities and initiatives:
- Fight for legislation that will advance medical breakthroughs by working with policymakers in the nation's capital and across the country.
- Build coalitions of diverse organizations and individuals to bring visibility and support to health research and its goals.
- Encourage greater funding for the National Institutes of Health and other public health agencies.
- Promote greater private sector research efforts that complements public funding.
- Advocate for more research dollars to go to age-related diseases such as Alzheimer's, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, osteoporosis, and Parkinson's disease, as well as better scientific understanding of the underlying aging process.Conducts grassroots education campaigns for health professionals and the public on diseases which disproportionately affect the elderly, such as congestive heart failure, incontinence, macular degeneration, and high blood pressure.
- Conduct studies and surveys that examine important medical, behavioral, and social issues associated with longevity, including a widely-quoted survey of American's attitudes toward health and aging.
- Serve as a source for reliable information on the health and well-being of older people, and on trends associated with seniors.
- Create and disseminate health education materials to consumers in a variety of formats.
What are the organization's capabilities for doing this?
For over 35 years, the Alliance has been a leading nonprofit force advancing the science of aging and health, educating health care consumers and medical professionals, and advocating for public policies to promote aging research and higher quality of life for older Americans. For this reason, the Alliance has become a valued advocacy organization and a respected influential voice with policymakers.
The Alliance is led by a team of experts in non-profit management, public health, health education, and public policy. These leaders, along with the entire organization, meet the highest possible standards to be accurate, objective, and ethically sound in all of its activities, communications, educational materials, and public statements.
The Alliance also has a history of collaboration with other organizations in order to achieve our goals of improving the health and independence of the aging population. The Alliance stands ready to develop effective partnerships with those who share our scientific, educational, health and policy goals.
What have they accomplished so far and what's next?
In the last 3.5 decades, the “small but mighty" Alliance for Aging Research has racked up a pretty impressive list of accomplishments. Here are just a few:
The Alliance was one of the main organizations that advocated for the NIH doubling, increasing NIH's budget from $13.7 to $27.1 billion between 1999 and 2003.
In 1990, the Alliance teamed with former Cabinet Secretary Joseph Califano to convince Congress to establish a network of Claude Pepper Older Americans Independence Centers. The goal of the OAIC program, which exists today at 16 major academic institutions, is to increase scientific knowledge that allows older adults to maintain or restore their independence.
Also in the early 1990s, the Alliance devised a plan with the Commonwealth Fund to raise support for physician-scientists to train in geriatrics. This effort was the basis for today's highly-prestigious Paul Beeson Award program at the NIA, which to date has awarded more than 180 scholars from across the nation for advanced research projects in aging.
The Alliance was also a maverick on human embryonic stem cell research, launching a new patient coalition and leading CAMR, the Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research. After several years of tough fighting on the Hill, in 2009 President Barack Obama signed an Executive Order to repeal major restrictions on human embryonic stem cell research funds.
In 2006, the Alliance launched the Accelerate Cure and Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease—or ACT-AD—coalition. For 10 years, ACT-AD has brought together patient advocates, researchers, industry, and government agencies, to convene with the FDA to tackle major barriers in Alzheimer's disease clinical development.
Also in 2006, the Alliance started its Silver Book series, a highly-respected resource that provides statistics on the human and economic burden of diseases in the 65+ population, and uniquely highlights areas of innovation.
In 2016, the Alliance-led Aging in Motion coalition pushed for the CDC to establish the first-ever ICD-10 code for sarcopenia. The Alliance also established an annual National Heart Valve Disease Awareness Day on February 22.
The Alliance continues to focus and explore the value of aging, especially how to calculate value for the 1 in 4 Americans—and 3 in 4 Americans aged 65 and older—who are living with multiple chronic conditions and using multiple treatments at the same time. The Alliance will explore what value is placed on our society's older adults and their health and will do this through facilitating webcasts with the Bipartisan Policy Center, participating in the World Economic Forum Committee on Human Enhancement, and engaging the FDA review divisions on Alzheimer's disease and sarcopenia clinical development.
Financials
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Operations
The people, governance practices, and partners that make the organization tick.
Connect with nonprofit leaders
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- Analyze a variety of pre-calculated financial metrics
- Access beautifully interactive analysis and comparison tools
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Connect with nonprofit leaders
SubscribeBuild relationships with key people who manage and lead nonprofit organizations with GuideStar Pro. Try a low commitment monthly plan today.
- Analyze a variety of pre-calculated financial metrics
- Access beautifully interactive analysis and comparison tools
- Compare nonprofit financials to similar organizations
Want to see how you can enhance your nonprofit research and unlock more insights? Learn More about GuideStar Pro.
Alliance for Aging Research
Board of directorsas of 01/19/2024
James Scott
Applied Policy
Daniel Perry
John L Steffens
Spring Mountain Capital, LP
George Beach
Beach Creative Communications
William Schuyler
Mark Simon
Torreya Partners, LLC
John Alam
EIP Pharma, LLC
Michele Markus
Omnicom Health Group
Margaret H. Davis-Cerrone
Pfizer, Inc.
James E. Eden
The Eden Group, LLC
Karen Gally
Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc.
Mary Bordoni
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Kelsey Lang
Calvin W. Schmidt
Johnson & Johnson
Cassandra McCullough
Association of Black Cardiologists, Inc.
Jay Reinstein
Amy Efantis
GlaxoSmithKline
John Whyte
WebMD
Andrea Masciale
Johnson & Johnson
Board leadership practices
GuideStar worked with BoardSource, the national leader in nonprofit board leadership and governance, to create this section.
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Board orientation and education
Does the board conduct a formal orientation for new board members and require all board members to sign a written agreement regarding their roles, responsibilities, and expectations? Yes -
CEO oversight
Has the board conducted a formal, written assessment of the chief executive within the past year ? Yes -
Ethics and transparency
Have the board and senior staff reviewed the conflict-of-interest policy and completed and signed disclosure statements in the past year? Yes -
Board composition
Does the board ensure an inclusive board member recruitment process that results in diversity of thought and leadership? Yes -
Board performance
Has the board conducted a formal, written self-assessment of its performance within the past three years? Not applicable