- Phyllis Atkinson
- Kenneth Brummel-Smith
- Charles A. Cefalu
- Rebecca Conant
- Rebecca Elon
- Jerome J. Epplin
- Gary J. Kennedy
- John Murphy
- Cheryl Phillips
- Marc Rothman
- Barney Spivack
Both the networking opportunities that AGS membership affords, and the aging policy advocacy work that AGS does are centrally important to me. - Gary J. Kennedy, MD
I joined the American Geriatrics Society at least a decade ago. I've been a member of AGS' Program Committee, and its Education Committee. I was also the first formal liaison between AGS and the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatrists (AAGP) - of which I'm also a member.
I think one of the AGS' strengths is that it's multidisciplinary. It's the umbrella organization for all providers in the field.
Both the networking opportunities that AGS membership affords, and the aging policy advocacy work that AGS does are centrally important to me. Mental health issues are always stigmatized and there are fewer mental health providers, so it's critically important that mental health providers partner with primary care physicians and other healthcare professionals if we're to have any success with advocacy on behalf of mental health services for older adults.
I really applaud the AGS position statement on depression and the loan forgiveness act for which AGS is advocating. We need this kind of legislation and other measures for which AGS advocates - legislation to improve Medicare reimbursement, for example - to address workforce shortages in the field and help ensure that older adults have access to appropriate healthcare. Those are just a few of my favorites among the many things AGS does.
Gary J. Kennedy, MD, AGS Member, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Director, Division of Geriatric Psychiatry & Fellowship Training Program, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York.








