Professional Education

Pine Rest Grand Rounds

Cognitive Aging

Grand Rounds Presentation 

Cognitive aging is a universal phenomenon that must be better understood by clinicians, a trajectory across multiple cognitive functions upstream from mild neurocognitive and major neurocognitive disorders. Dan G. Blazer, MD, MPH, PhD will review the epidemiology, risk factors, diagnosis, interventions, and messages to patients experiencing cognitive aging.

Learning Objectives

  1. To be able to describe cognitive aging as a universal challenge for older adults.
  2. To list at least three differences between cognitive aging and Alzheimer’s Disease
  3. To list three of the most beneficial interventions for cognitive aging.

Presenter

  • Dr. Blazer

    Dr. Dan G. Blazer

    Dr. Blazer is the JP Gibbons Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine. He received his MD degree from the University of Tennessee, his MPH and PhD degrees from the University of North Carolina and trained in Psychiatry at Duke. A former interim chair of Psychiatry and Dean of Medical Education for Duke University School of Medicine. He was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 1995 and received the Walsh McDermott Award from the Institute for Lifetime Distinguished Service in 2014. Dr. Blazer was the recipient of the first Annual Geriatric Psychiatry Research Award and the Distinguished Service Award from the American College of Psychiatrists, the Weinberg Award for geriatric psychiatry and the Oscar Pfister Award for the integration of religion and psychiatry from the American Psychiatric Association, the Klemeier Award from the Gerontological Society of America, Rema Lapouse Award from the American Public Health Association, the Distinguished Faculty Award from Duke University School of Medicine and the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the University of North Carolina School of Public Health and the University of Tennessee School of Medicine, as well as the Senior Investigator Award from the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry.
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