Search

Outstanding Junior Clinician Education Manuscript Award

The Outstanding Junior Clinician Education Manuscript Award is targeted to clinician-educator junior faculty (Assistant Professor/Instructor) in the development stages of their careers. The junior faculty member must have first-authored an outstanding peer-reviewed clinical education journal article focused on the care of older adults. Selection of award winners will consider the article's novelty, methodological, clarity of presentation, and potential to influence education relevant to the care of older adults. 

Renew Now

Thank you for supporting the AGS mission to improve the health, independence and quality of life of all older people. We value your membership and want to help you get the most value out of your benefits. As an AGS member you receive over $1,500 in benefits each year.Our membership team is here to answer any questions you have about renewing your membership or accessing your benefits.

Page Not Found

Welcome to the American Geriatrics Society new website.

The page you are looking for has been relocated. Please use our menu or the following sitemap to find your way around our new website.

Thank you for visiting!

 

Jeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Award for Emerging Investigators in the Surgical and Related Medical Specialties

The Silverstein Memorial Award for Emerging Investigators in the Surgical and Related Medical Specialties recognizes emerging researchers across health care committed to careers in aging. Their geriatrics-focused work in surgical and other medical specialties helps to advance the unique care we all need as we age.

About Geriatrics

Our bodies change over time, and our health care needs to adapt with us. Geriatrics is the specialty focused on the high-quality, person-centered care we all need as we age. “High-quality care” aims to improve health, independence, and quality of life for older people. “Person-centered care” puts our personal values and preferences at the heart of our care decisions.

Geriatrics is leading the way when it comes to thinking about health, care, and healthcare quality differently.

Is Geriatrics Right For You

When you ask geriatrics healthcare professionals about why they chose their careers, you’ll hear them the same ideals voiced by many different clinicians: compassion, an interest in learning about people’s histories, and a desire to provide continuing care for older adults.

I get to time travel to different eras and cultures, because older people are so willing to share their life stories.

ADGAP

The Association of Directors of Geriatric Academic Programs (ADGAP)—a sister organization of the AGS—is committed to advancing academic geriatrics programs and supporting academic geriatrics program directors to benefit and aid patient care, research, and teaching programs in geriatric medicine within accredited medical schools located in the U.S.

Training Requirements

As a truly interdisciplinary field, there are plenty of pathways and career options in geriatrics. Different types of healthcare professionals go through different schooling, testing, and licensing processes. Explore the categories below to find out the variety of ways you can pursue an education in geriatrics and work toward improving the health of us all as we age.

Training For Geriatricians

Education & Training

A geriatrician is a physician who is specifically trained to evaluate and manage the unique healthcare needs and treatment preferences of older people. Geriatricians focus on maintaining well-being and independence based on high-quality, person-centered care. They diagnose and treat conditions that may commonly occur with age.

Training For Geriatric Nurse Practitioners

Education & Training

Nursing roles are diverse, ranging from delivering or overseeing direct care and coordinating case management to establishing nursing practice standards, developing quality assurance procedures, and directing complex nursing care systems. Nurses specializing in geriatrics are educated to understand and treat the often complex physical and mental health needs of older people. They try to help older men and women protect health and manage changes in mental and physical abilities.

Training For Geriatric Pharmacists

Education & Training

Geriatric pharmacy specialists are those pharmacists that have special knowledge in the care of older adults. To become a pharmacist, you must obtain a Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) degree.  Pharm.D. programs are typically 4 years in length and require 2-4 years of pre-requisite course material.  While curriculums may differ, didactic experiences are offered early along introductory pharmacy practice experiential learning, with the final year being dedicated to advanced pharmacy practice experiential learning.

Training For Geriatric Social Workers

Education & Training

Social workers are health professionals committed to enhancing the well-being of individuals, families, groups, communities, and societies, with a particular focus on those who are most vulnerable. Social workers who specialize in gerontological social work value interprofessional, team-based, person-centered care in community-based and institutional settings. They have expertise in working with—and on behalf of—diverse older persons across individual, family, community, and societal spheres of influence.

Core Competencies

Existing Formal Geriatrics Competencies and Milestones

The following healthcare disciplines have formalized geriatrics competencies approved by at least one national organization. Certification in these competencies varies by discipline. Some have formal certification pathways and some do not.

Careers in Geriatrics

Geriatrician

A geriatrician is an internal or family medicine physician who also has special expertise (and may be board-certified) in geriatrics. In addition to their special knowledge of health and well-being as we age, geriatricians are known for collaborating with interdisciplinary teams including nurses, pharmacists, physician assistants, social workers, and many others who work together to coordinate complex care for older adults and caregivers.

Training for Clinical Educators

Clinician educators are healthcare professionals who also work as educators in graduate health education programs. They have a unique role in the field, as they not only provide care to older adults but also work to train the next generation of professionals who will care for us all as we age. Clinician educators might work in academic and community hospitals, and serve as professors and program coordinators for trainees (the term for those pursuing a career in a health profession).

Reframing Aging

In 2014, eight of the nation’s leading aging-focused organizations, including the AGS, formed an unprecedented partnership, the Leaders of Aging Organizations (LAO), to create a better public understanding of older adults’ needs and contributions to society—and subsequently to improve health and care for us all as we age.

Humana Value-Based Care Research Award

Austin J. Hilt, MPH, & Morteza Komeylian, MD

With support from Humana Inc., one of the nation’s leading health and well-being companies, the AGS awarded the inaugural Humana Value-Based Care Research Awards to Austin J. Hilt, MPH, a medical student at Northeast Ohio Medical University, and Morteza Komeylian, MD, a Clinician Fellow at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.

Pathways in Geriatrics: Educators

Clinician Educators split their time between seeing patients and teaching in graduate health education programs.

They have a unique role in the field, as they not only provide care to older adults but also work to train the next generation of professionals who will care for us all as we age. Learn a personal story from an educator below.

 

Back to Top