CC.AGE
The Trond Mohn Research Foundation and the University of Bergen generously provided financial support to establish the Centre for Complex Conditions and Ageing (CC.AGE). Here, we investigate the use of novel technology and high-quality care to improve the lives of older adults with complex conditions (CC) living at home.
About the research centre
Providing care and support for the steadily growing population of older adults with CC is one of the key challenges of our society. Research has consistently shown that most older adults do not want to be institutionalized and rather wish to live independently at home for as long as possible. In the coming years, the healthcare system will register a lack of professional healthcare workers to match future demands, which calls for a paradigm change.
The primary objective of CC.AGE is to improve the living situation for older adults with CC to live safely and independently at home with a good quality of life, and to support their relatives and municipal healthcare professionals.
To achieve this, we aim to:
- Design, implement, and test the efficacy of a research-based digital plug-and-play platform with a range of
technologies integrated into a mobile tool for use at home. - Identify traditional care areas that can be safely replaced by digital support.
- Determine specifications for integrating existing technologies and for developing new products that
will be able to sustain 鈥榩lug-and-play鈥 integration. - Contribute to the design and testing of a social living environment.
Transdisciplinary team
CC.AGE employs major transdisciplinary collaboration between medicine, nutrition, systems science, artificial intelligence, software engineering, economy, and ethics that builds on existing evidence, user involvement, and
methodological expertise. Our industry partner, Youwell, is a developer of e-health platforms, while our public sector partner is the Bergen Municipality. Our local scientific partners are the Centre for Nutrition (黑料吃瓜资源) and the Bergen Centre for Ethics and Priority Setting in Health (BCEPS), 黑料吃瓜资源.
Our collaborators include colleagues from Tohoku University (Japan), Yale University (USA), Harvard McLean Hospital (USA), and Leiden University (The Netherlands). Our national collaborators include the EITRI medical incubator and the Alrek Health Cluster.
See a short video including interviews with two of our collaboration partners, Heather Allore and Ipsit Vahia.
Work package organization
CC.AGE encompasses various work packages (WPs). The central activity will be a 12-week randomized controlled trial (RCT) to explore the effect of a multicomponent intervention in home-dwelling people with CC. WPs 1, 3, and 4 inform the development in WPs 5 and 6. WP2 for ethics informs all aspects of our work. Project management falls under WP7.
Read more about each work package (WP):
- WP1: e-Delphi
- WP2: Ethics
- WP3: Nutrition
- WP4: Proof of concept (pilot studies)
- WP5: ALIVE platform
- WP6: A mixed method randomized controlled trial (RCT)
- WP7: This consists of the employment processes and the regular management of the project, and dissemination efforts with scientific presentations, public engagement, and popular science dissemination. The project management and coordination are led by Bettina S. Huseb酶.
Societal impact
CC.AGE will increase access to research-based mental and physical value-based healthcare with a positive impact on safety, quality of life, caregiver burden, ethics, cost-benefit, e-health, and society. This might lead to game-changing support to older adults with complex diseases, enabling them to live safely and independently at home with a good quality of life, at the same time benefiting their relatives and municipal health professionals.
Highlights so far
The Centre began its work on February 1st, 2024, and held its . The project鈥檚 vast reach and multidisciplinarity were showcased through several insightful contributions from our national and international colleagues and collaborators. The highlights of the programme included an excellent collaborative talk by Dr. Ipsit Vahia and Catharyn Gildesgame from Harvard University titled 鈥淢edical Center鈥檚 Partnership to Support Older Adults鈥 Needs鈥, followed by an energizing and inspiring talk centred around 鈥淪uccesses in Aging鈥 by Professor Heather Allore from Yale School of Medicine. Additionally, our CC.AGE collaborators took the stage to provide insights on the specific work packages encompassed by the project. Overall, it was a successful inauguration that demonstrated the importance of personal engagement and collaboration across disciplines.
See two short videos from the opening:
CC.AGE team members:
- Bettina S. Huseb酶, MD, PhD, Centre leader, Head of SEFAS, lead of WP2, WP6, and WP7
- Monica P膬tra葯cu, PhD, Postdoc, lead of WP5
- Line Iden Berge, MD, PhD, specialist in psychiatry, Professor, lead of WP4
- Brice Marty, PhD, Postdoc
- Jutta Dierkes, PhD, Professor, lead of WP3, collaborating partner
- Zoya Sabir, PhD, Postdoc, lead of WP1
- Lisa Aaslestad, MS, PhD Candidate
- Justin Haugland-Pruitt, MS, PhD Candidate
- Annelise Elde, PhD Candidate
- Shivam Pandey, PhD Candidate
- Asmat Ullah, Postdoc
- Finn Patrick Nilsen, user representative
- Irina Oltu (Youwell)
- 脴yvind Grimsgaard (Youwell)
- Rolf Moe-Nilssen, Professor Emeritus, 黑料吃瓜资源
- Cathrine Sommersten, Bergen Municipality
- Tine Nordgreen, PhD, Professor
The CC.AGE team on the opening, October 1, 2024.
International partners:
- Ipsit V. Vahia, Harvard Medical School, McLean, US
- Heather Allore, Yale University, US
- Wilco P. Achterberg, University of Leiden, The Netherlands
- Rui Nouchi, Tohoku University, Japan
SEFAS PIs in the CC.AGE team with central collaborators.
Funding
- Trond Mohn Research Foundation
- University of Bergen