R01AG073402
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
The MyGoals for Healthy Aging multi-center randomized controlled trial - Poverty is associated with harsh living conditions, few opportunities to exercise, and poor access to healthy food that collectively produce "wear and tear" on organ systems. Psychological stress increases the fragility of neurons in the central nervous system, potentially producing both the loss of function and volume in areas of the brain that are involved in maintaining homeostasis (e.g., blood glucose), planning tasks, executing tasks, motivation, and emotional control.
Psychological stress and poor nutrition can accelerate the aging process, and may manifest as executive function deficits, diabetes, obesity, Alzheimer's disease/Alzheimer's disease-related dementias (AD/ADRD), and early death. The mechanisms by which poverty-associated stress accelerates aging are known, but there is no proven intervention to slow the rapid pace of aging among impoverished families. Anti-poverty programs are a logical point of intervention.
An ongoing randomized-controlled trial (RCT), MyGoals for Employment Success, intervenes on both poverty using proven employment incentives and on executive function deficits using a field-tested coaching program. That study was designed to evaluate outcomes associated with executive function, economic well-being, and social functioning. To evaluate outcomes associated with aging, additional intervention time and follow up are needed because health outcomes tend to lag economic outcomes.
The National Institute on Aging provided one year of funding for cohort maintenance and to re-design MyGoals for Employment Success into a healthy aging study with three years of intervention time, six years of follow up, and health, aging, and cognition measures. This re-design was done in collaboration with leading interdisciplinary experts using the Delphi method, a formalized process for understanding how to optimize measure selection and the timing of measure collection.
With their input, we propose an innovative RCT that we call MyGoals for Healthy Aging. We will measure the effect of the intervention on psychological stress, diet, sleep, mood, loneliness, height, weight, executive function, blood sugar, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, and gene methylation patterns. We will also store blood for future "freezer studies" that allow for more sophisticated measures of human aging. In addition, we will maintain an ongoing dataset linked to electronic data so that it is possible to measure outcomes beyond the time frame of the study, including future income and mortality by cause of death.
Completion of these aims will provide foundational evidence on the ability of social policy to influence aging-related health outcomes; our ultimate goal is to test a novel intervention that might reduce or eliminate disparities in chronic diseases including AD/ADRD.
Psychological stress and poor nutrition can accelerate the aging process, and may manifest as executive function deficits, diabetes, obesity, Alzheimer's disease/Alzheimer's disease-related dementias (AD/ADRD), and early death. The mechanisms by which poverty-associated stress accelerates aging are known, but there is no proven intervention to slow the rapid pace of aging among impoverished families. Anti-poverty programs are a logical point of intervention.
An ongoing randomized-controlled trial (RCT), MyGoals for Employment Success, intervenes on both poverty using proven employment incentives and on executive function deficits using a field-tested coaching program. That study was designed to evaluate outcomes associated with executive function, economic well-being, and social functioning. To evaluate outcomes associated with aging, additional intervention time and follow up are needed because health outcomes tend to lag economic outcomes.
The National Institute on Aging provided one year of funding for cohort maintenance and to re-design MyGoals for Employment Success into a healthy aging study with three years of intervention time, six years of follow up, and health, aging, and cognition measures. This re-design was done in collaboration with leading interdisciplinary experts using the Delphi method, a formalized process for understanding how to optimize measure selection and the timing of measure collection.
With their input, we propose an innovative RCT that we call MyGoals for Healthy Aging. We will measure the effect of the intervention on psychological stress, diet, sleep, mood, loneliness, height, weight, executive function, blood sugar, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, and gene methylation patterns. We will also store blood for future "freezer studies" that allow for more sophisticated measures of human aging. In addition, we will maintain an ongoing dataset linked to electronic data so that it is possible to measure outcomes beyond the time frame of the study, including future income and mortality by cause of death.
Completion of these aims will provide foundational evidence on the ability of social policy to influence aging-related health outcomes; our ultimate goal is to test a novel intervention that might reduce or eliminate disparities in chronic diseases including AD/ADRD.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New York,
New York
100323725
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 485% from $598,596 to $3,502,358.
The Trustees Of Columbia University In The City Of New York was awarded
Poverty Intervention for Healthy Aging: MyGoals RCT Study
Project Grant R01AG073402
worth $3,502,358
from National Institute on Aging in August 2022 with work to be completed primarily in New York New York United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years 9 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.866 Aging Research.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Research Project Grant (Parent R01 Clinical Trial Required).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/21/26
Period of Performance
8/1/22
Start Date
5/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.5M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.5M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01AG073402
Transaction History
Modifications to R01AG073402
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01AG073402
SAI Number
R01AG073402-602169703
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Funding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Awardee UEI
QHF5ZZ114M72
Awardee CAGE
3FHD3
Performance District
NY-13
Senators
Kirsten Gillibrand
Charles Schumer
Charles Schumer
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0843) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,322,095 | 100% |
Modified: 5/21/26