The National Center to Reframe Aging — the leading organization for proven communication strategies and tools to effectively frame aging issues — is partnering with The West End Home Foundation (WEHF), an independent charitable foundation located in Nashville, Tennessee.
The National Center to Reframe Aging will be a strategic partner to support the WEHF’s mission to enrich the lives of older people through grant making, advocacy, and community collaboration. Key leaders of the Tennessee Department of Disability and Aging and the Tennessee aging network will participate in educational opportunities and receive tools from the National Center to Reframe Aging, equipping them to join the movement to advance a complete story about aging.
“We are excited about partnering with The West End Home Foundation to empower Tennessee’s leaders in the aging network,” said Patricia D’Antonio, BSPharm, MS, MBA, BCGP, executive director of the National Center and the vice president for policy and professional affairs at the Gerontological Society of America. “We look forward to providing participants with the tools to reframe the way we talk about aging — driving real change for generations to come.”
The implementation of evidence-based reframing strategies to change how we talk about aging will strengthen support for the ongoing work to build the capacity of WEHF’s partner agencies and the larger aging services network in Middle Tennessee.
“WEHF is dedicated to enriching the lives of older adults in Middle Tennessee,” said Dianne Oliver, executive director of WEHF. “We provide grant funding to forty nonprofit organizations and offer capacity building and community education to ensure that all of us are supported as we age and have opportunities to remain engaged in our communities.”
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The National Center to Reframe Aging is dedicated to ending ageism by advancing a complete story about aging in America. The center is the trusted source for proven communication strategies and tools to effectively frame aging issues. It is the nation’s leading organization, cultivating an active community of individuals and organizations to spread awareness of unproductive attitudes towards aging and influence policies and programs that benefit all of us as we age. Led by the Gerontological Society of America, the National Center acts on behalf of and amplifies efforts of the ten Leaders of Aging Organizations. Support for the National Center comes from Archstone Foundation, The John A. Hartford Foundation, RRF Foundation for Aging, and The SCAN Foundation.
The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), founded in 1945, is the nation’s oldest and largest interdisciplinary organization focused on aging. It serves more than 6,000 members in over 50 countries. GSA’s vision, meaningful lives as we age, is supported by its mission to foster excellence, innovation, and collaboration to advance aging research, education, practice, and policy. GSA is home to the National Academy on an Aging Society (a nonpartisan public policy institute) and the National Center to Reframe Aging.