Yearly Archives: 2017

/2017

TRIPLL Featured in Weill Cornell Medicine Article

2018-09-30T23:53:17-04:00

TRIPLL has recently been featured in an article published in Weill Cornell Medicine. A Sense of Relief A Collaborative Institute Brings Together Researchers from Weill Cornell Medicine and the Ithaca and Tech Campuses—Along with NYC Community Groups—to Combat Chronic Pain in Older Adults The twice-weekly tai chi class at Riverdale Senior Services routinely draws dozens of participants. Photo by John Abbott Founded in 2009 with a five-year grant from the NIH’s National Institute on Aging (which was renewed in 2014), TRIPLL is one of 13 federally funded Edward R. Roybal Centers for Translational Research on Aging nationwide, each of [...]

TRIPLL Featured in Weill Cornell Medicine Article2018-09-30T23:53:17-04:00

Long-term outcomes from training in self-management of chronic pain in an elderly population: a randomized controlled trial

2018-09-26T20:50:13-04:00

Abstract: This study compares the outcomes, from pretreatment to 1-year follow-up, of an outpatient, CBT-based pain self-management program (PSM) that included exercises, pain education, and pain coping strategies, with a control condition (exercise-attention control, EAC) that included exercises and a control for the attention of the treatment team. We previously reported short-term results (to 1-month follow-up) from the same study. This new paper considers the important issue of maintenance of treatment-related gains. The participants (n = 141) were a heterogeneous sample of ambulant, community-dwelling older adult patients with chronic pain (mean age: 73.90 [6.5] years [range: 65-87 years]). The long-term [...]

Long-term outcomes from training in self-management of chronic pain in an elderly population: a randomized controlled trial2018-09-26T20:50:13-04:00

Cornell Roybal Center Aging ePainCare Consensus Conference

2018-09-30T23:53:25-04:00

TRIPLL has formed The Cornell International ePainCare Collaboration, an international collaborative made up of a wide range researchers interested and/or working in the areas of mobile health, technology, pain and/or aging. The mission of this collaboration is to expand existing, and facilitate new programs of basic and applied research, by evaluating the role of electronic and mobile technologies in the management of later life pain (ePainCare). TRIPLL will host an international conference on April 7th, 2017, in New York City, with broad multidisciplinary stakeholder representation – behavioral/social scientists, health care practitioners, older adults (65 years and older) living with pain, professionals [...]

Cornell Roybal Center Aging ePainCare Consensus Conference2018-09-30T23:53:25-04:00

How Virtual Reality Can Assist the Elderly

2018-09-26T20:52:29-04:00

Among the many new technologies on the market, virtual reality offers plenty of possibilities for exploration as it can be used in different industries including senior care. The technology has arrived at the right time with mobile devices already being widely used by the elderly. Although they generally lag behind their younger counterparts, users aged 65 and older said that owning a smartphone offers ‘a liberating experience’. Smartphones are also the core of many VR headsets. They can either be connected directly to the wearable or wirelessly to render virtual reality images. However, there are particular features that make a [...]

How Virtual Reality Can Assist the Elderly2018-09-26T20:52:29-04:00

Aging and addicted: The opioid epidemic affects elderly too

2018-09-26T20:51:29-04:00

As the nation grapples with a devastating opioid epidemic, concerns have primarily focused on young people buying drugs on the street. But America's elderly also have a problem. Over the past several decades, physicians have increasingly prescribed seniors pain medications to address chronic pain from arthritis, cancer, neurological diseases and other illnesses that become more common in later life. A recent study found that in 2011, 15 percent of seniors were prescribed an opioid when they were discharged from the hospital; three months later, 42 percent were still taking the pain medicine. Excerpted from an article in the Chicago Tribune, [...]

Aging and addicted: The opioid epidemic affects elderly too2018-09-26T20:51:29-04:00

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Translational Research Institute on Pain in Later Life
Weill Cornell Medicine, Division of Geriatric and Palliative Medicine
525 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10065
Phone: 212.746.1801
Email: tripll@med.cornell.edu