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STATEMENTS

Brickfield, Cyril, legislative counsel, National Retired Teachers Associa-
tion, American Association of Retired Persons, accompanied by Peter W.
Hughes, legislative representative, National Retired Teachers Associa-
tion, American Association of Retired Persons..

Prepared statement...

Church, Hon. Frank, a U.S. Senator from the State of Idaho..
Cruikshank, Nelson H., president, National Council of Senior Citizens,
accompanied by Miss Dorothy McCamman__

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227

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Prepared statement__

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Donnelly, Mrs. Marjorie, president, American Dietetic Association, North
Carolina State University, Raleigh, N.C...

234

Drucker, Edward M., vice president of mareting, Pronto Food Corp.,
Chicago, Ill

172

Eagleton, Hon. Thomas F., a U.S. Senator from the State of Missouri,
Chairman, Senate Subcommittee on Aging--

Eisdorfer, Dr. Carl, professor of psychiatry, and director, Center for Study
of Aging and Human Development, Duke University...
Harman, Dr. Denham, chairman, American Aging Association, and pro-
fessor of medicine and of biochemistry at University of Nebraska College
of Medicine, Omaha, Nebr..

Hettinger, William P., Jr., Ph. D., private citizen, physical chemist, and
former advanced training grantee, NIH, National Institute of Child
Health and Human Resources-

Holmes, Douglas, Ph. D., director, Center for Community Research,
New York, N.Y.

Prepared statement_

Kennedy, Hon. Edward M., a U.S. Senator from the State of Massachu-
setts, Chairman, Senate Subcommittee on Health

Kurzman, Stephen, Assistant Secretary for Legislation, Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare, accompanied by John B. Martin, Com-
missioner, Administration on Aging, and Dr. Robert Marston, Director,
National Institutes of Health_

National Institutes of Health, prepared statement
Pepper, Hon. Claude, Member of Congress from the State of Florida, pre-
pared statement..

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Percy, Hon. Charles H., a U.S. Senator from the State of Illinois_-
Prepared statement__.

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271

Reason, Mrs. Ella, project director, Nutrition for the Elderly, Council
of Elders, Roxbury, Mass-

165

Richardson, Eliot L., Secretary, Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, prepared statement.

252

Sinex, Dr. F. Marott, professor and chairman of the biochemistry de-
partment, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass--
Prepared statement_

Strehler, Bernard L., Ph. D., professor of biology, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, Calif., prepared statement--

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Walters, Thomas G., president, National Association of Retired Federal
Employees, accompanied by Clarence M. Tarr, vice president.......
Prepared statement__

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.ESS

THE

Williams, Hon. Harrison A., Jr., a U.S. Senator from the State of New
Jersey, Chairman, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare - - - -

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Articles, publications, etc.:

"Developments In Aging-1970," Chapter V, Nutrition and Other
Consumer Issues, from the annual report of the Senate Special
Committee on Aging..

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"Nutrition for Older Americans: Demonstration Program Expe-
rience, a position paper published by Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare, Social and Rehabilitation Service, Admin-
istration on Aging, by Jeanette Pelcovits, M.A., and Douglas
Holmes, Ph. D..

ГНЕ

19

141

Articles, publications, etc.-Continued

Policy statement of the American Dietetic Association (excerpt from
the Journal of the American Dietetic Association).
"Position Paper-Socialization Through Nutrition for the Elderly,"
prepared by Douglas Holmes, Ph. D., Director, Center for Research,
New York, N. Y., at the request of Commissioner John B. Martin,
Administration on Aging, Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare

"Slowing the Clock," from the June 11, 1971, issue of News Focus,
by Charles Bartlett..

"The American Dietetic Association Position Paper on Nutrition and
Aging," from Journal of the American Dietetic Association_
"The Health of the Aged," by Paul Dudley White, M.D., Boston,
Mass...

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235

201

290

236

107

"White House Conference on Food, Nutrition, and Health," (final report).

131

Communications to:

Eagleton, Hon. Thomas Francis, a U.S. Senator from the State of
Missouri, chairman, Senate Subcommittee on Aging, from:
Brown, George H., Director, Bureau of the Census, U.S. Depart-
ment of Commerce, Washington, D.C., July 1, 1971--
Martin, John B., Commissioner, Administration on Aging, De-
partment of Health, Education, and Welfare, July 22, 1971_--
Response to questions submitted by Senator Kennedy con-
cerning the Administration on Aging's position on S. 887,
S. 1163, and S. 1925, July 23, 1971__

Walters, Thomas G., president, National Association of Retired
Federal Employees, July 22, 1971, with enclosure-

White, Paul D., M.D., Boston, Mass., June 25, 1971, with en-
closure (address delivered at Duke University)_
Harman, Dr. Denham, chairman, American Aging Association, de-
partment of biochemistry, University of Nebraksa, from Gerald D.
LaVeck, M.D., Director, National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development, April 8, 1971---

Selected tables:

Cumulative analysis by program, NICHD.
Historical analysis by program, NICHD..
NICHD budgets.

NICHD Research Grants in Aging-
NIH funding history.

Summary of aging research at NICHD.

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275

184

106

280

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60

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RESEARCH IN AGING AND NUTRITION PROGRAMS

FOR THE ELDERLY, 1971

TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1971

U.S. SENATE,

SUBCOMMITTEE ON AGING OF THE

COMMITTEE ON LABOR AND PUBLIC WELFARE,

Washington, D.C. The subcommittee met at 9:40 a.m., in room 4232, New Senate Office Building, Senator Thomas F. Eagleton (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.

Present: Senator Eagleton (presiding).

Committee staff members present: James J. Murphy, counsel to the subcommittee; and Michael S. Gordon, minority counsel to the subcommittee.

Senator EAGLETON. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. The Subcommittee on Aging of the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare is now in session to begin its hearings on research in aging, specifically directing attention to S. 887 and S. 1925.

The bills we are considering today, the two I previously mentioned, relate to research in the aging process and the diseases and other special problems and needs of the aged.

Today, about 10 percent of our population-20 million Americans is 65 years of age or over. Within the next 30 years an additional 45 to 50 million Americans will have passed their 65th birthday and this group will represent an even greater proportion of the population. Yet federally supported research into phenomena associated with aging is both incredibly small and fragmented among the departments of the Federal Government. This diffusion of responsibility has resulted in duplication of efforts, lack of coordination and gaps in our overall approach. Most importantly, the result has been lack of systematic research in aging.

This allocation of resources is not only inequitable, it is shortsighted. Persons over 65 account for an inordinately large share of the total health care expenses in the United States; by some estimates, as much as two-thirds of our total expenditures for health care can be attributed to treating elderly persons. This tremendous expenditure of funds for the care of the aged is ironic when, according to recognized medical authorities, medical knowledge regarding aging and degenerative diseases has reached the point where a major breakthrough could be made.

(1)

S. 887, which I introduced with the cosponsorship of 18 Senators, would create a National Institute of Gerontology as part of the National Institutes of Health. The purpose of the proposed National Institute of Gerontology is to conduct and support biomedical, social, and behavioral research and training related to the aging process and the diseases and other special health problems and needs of the aged. It would fill a gap in our research efforts of long standing.

The work done by this Institute would have a very substantial effect on the quality of life of the aged. It could lead to an extension of the healthy middle years of life. The contributions each individual might make to society would be increased. And, by improving our knowledge of the aging process, we can hope to develop a greater proficiency in preventive medicine for the diseases of the aged, thus reducing the annual cost of health care now attributable to treatment of the aged.

S. 1925, the Research on Aging Act, was introduced by Senator Williams, the chairman of the full Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, who has also served in the past as the chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging. His experience in this field has earned him an expertise which I know will be of great value to the subcommittee. His concern for the conditions under which millions of elderly Americans live has been amply demonstrated by the investigations he has conducted and the legislation he has sponsored.

The Research on Aging Act would establish an Aging Research Commission to develop a comprehensive plan for intensive and coordinated research into the biological, medical, psychological, social, and economic aspects of aging. The Commission would be composed of seven members to be appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate, with at least one member from each of the following disciplines: biological science, clinical medicine, the behavioral, and social sciences, and economics.

Both of these bills have the same goal: To coordinate and greatly increase research in aging. The governmental mechanisms proposed by each to achieve this goal vary somewhat, but I am confident we can work together to reconcile such differences as may exist in the two bills.

(A copy of S. 887 and S. 1925 follows:)

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