What Do We Mean by Health and Aging Policy?
In many ways, gerontology represents the future of health care. The U.S. population is aging rapidly. By 2030, 71 million Americans (about 20% of the U.S. population) will be 65 and older. These individuals are at high risk for complex health problems, chronic illness, and impairment, and they are, and will continue to be, the heaviest users of health care.
Although estimates vary, today, older adults account for a substantial proportion of hospital days, ambulatory adult primary care visits, home care visits, and nursing home residents. Over the next 30 years, as the number of older Americans doubles, almost every medical specialty will have an increasingly older patient base. As a result, society is facing critical challenges regarding health and social services.
Our nation’s decision makers are currently confronting an enormous range of specific challenges in health care for the aging. These include:
At the same time, the substantial variance that already exist within the older population promise to become even more pronounced in the future. Many of these individuals have incomes below 200 percent of the poverty level, less than a high school education, and poor health and limitations in daily activities. As the older population grows, so will the size of this vulnerable fraction of older adults who need more assistance than those who are fortunate to have good health, strong social connections, and adequate resources.
The Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program views health in a broad context which extends beyond just health care. We define health and aging policies as policies that aim to improve the whole well-being of older adults. This can include issues of income security and civic engagement. Policy areas we consider priority include:

