
Roy M. And Phyllis Gough
Huffington Center on Aging

The first location of focused geriatric patient care, education, and
research by faculty was at the Houston Veterans Affairs Medical Center (HVAMC), an
affiliated Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) hospital. The Geriatric Evaluation Unit was
established at the HVAMC in 1980 by Robert J. Luchi, MD, founding director of the Huffington
Center on Aging (HCoA). As needs grew, program and staff increased with support from the
HVAMC and the Department of Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Based
upon recommendations of a Baylor Task Force on Aging, in early 1987, Baylor
College of Medicine committed funds to create the Baylor Program in Aging, and the NIA
awarded a Geriatric Leadership Academic Award (GLAA) with Dr. Robert Luchi as Principal
Investigator and Dr. James Smith as Co-Principal Investigator. In 1988, Mr. &
Mrs. Roy M. Huffington endowed the program to establish the Roy M. & Phyllis Gough
Huffington Center on Aging. On September 1, 1998, Roy
G. Smith, Ph.D., assumed the directorship of the HCOA.
The Roy M. and Phyllis Gough Huffington Center on Aging is committed to
addressing the needs of an aging population by providing medical education and training,
conducting basic and clinical science research, and delivering healthcare through BCM
affiliated hospitals and other institutions. Today, the Huffington Center on Aging is
recognized as one of the premier aging centers in the United States and the world.
The HCOA facilitates and coordinates interdepartmental research and
initiates its own research studies. HCoA-initiated research includes cell and molecular
biology of aging, adrenal cell biology, DHEA, aging of the skin, a program project
entitled "Control of Gene Expression in Cellular Senescence", the aging
cardiovascular system, healthcare outcomes research and ethical issues in acute and
long-term care settings.
Educational opportunities offered by the HCOA include courses and
seminars in the basic and clinical sciences for clinical practitioners, students,
trainees, faculty, staff and health professionals, as well as continuing medical
education. HCOA sponsors courses for medical students, geriatric medicine clinical
rotations for medical residents, and an accredited Geriatric Fellowship Training Program.
Research training opportunities include the Cell & Molecular Biology of Aging Research
Training Program for predoctoral and postdoctoral students.
Clinical faculty and trainees provide inpatient and outpatient care to
older persons through the Geriatric Medicine Associates of the Department of Medicine at
Smith Tower and The Methodist Hospital; in- and out-patient facilities at the HVAMC; and
several hospital and community long-term care facilities. |
History Affiliated Clinical
Activities
ˇGeriatric Medicine Associates
ˇGeriatrics and Extended Care
Core Center
Activities
ˇAdministrative Functions
ˇCommunity Education
ˇFunding
Faculty &
Staff
Roy G. Smith, PhD, Director
Carole Ashendorf, LMSW Ursula
Braun, MD
Kathy Ponchak Clifton
Gretchen Darlington, PhD
Ronald L. Davis, PhD
Judy Farness, MSN,N,GNP
Aimee Garcia, MD
Edith Gibson
Mehrnaz S. Gill, MS
Susan Hitchcock
Robert J. Luchi, MD
Laurence McCullough, PhD
Tonta M. Marchand, BS
Estela E. Medrano, PhD
Debra Meyer, BA
Victor Narcisse, MD
S. Robert Northrup, BA
Fred Periera, PhD
Scott Pletcher, PhD
Robert E. Reichlin, Ph.D.
Michelle Robinson
Robert E. Roush, EdD, MPH
Sarah Selleck, MD
Robert Glenn Smith, MD, PhD
Carolyn G. Stubbs
George E. Taffet, MD
Nikolai Timchenko, PhD
Patricia White, BS
Susan Williams, MD
Nancy L. Wilson, MA, LMSW
Anita Woods, PhD
Xiangwei Wu, PhD
Lynn C. Yeoman, Ph.D.
Marcia Yparraguirre, MBA
Hui Zheng, PhD
|