Demographic Divergence - Singapore

Demographic Divergence - Singapore

Demographic Divergence - Singapore

event Thursday, April 4, 2024 schedule 6.30pm - 9.00pm +08
Booking closed
Booking closed
event Thursday, April 4, 2024 schedule 6.30pm - 9.00pm +08
  • Singapore
Join the conversation on the challenges and opportunities for an ageing population
Open to: 
Alumni and guests
Location: 
Conrad Centennial Singapore | View details

Join Vice-Chancellor Professor Deborah Prentice and fellow alumni in Singapore on Thursday 4 April. Hear our panel of leading Cambridge thinkers discuss the impact of an ageing population and how governments and individuals alike can ensure our ageing experience is as positive and productive as possible.

Ageing is the great equaliser. And according to the World Health Organisation, people worldwide are now doing it for longer. Every country is experiencing growth in both the number and proportion of older persons in the population, and embracing the new opportunities this represents – as well as facing major challenges to ensure that their health, economic and social systems can adjust to this demographic shift. But what does this mean – and where to begin?

Don’t miss these fascinating and convivial opportunities to find out the latest from the University, and network with fellow Cambridge alumni and friends at our Global Cambridge events.

The evening will include drinks and canapes, and an opportunity to network with fellow alumni. 

Schedule:
6.30pm - 7.15pm - Welcome reception
7.15pm - 8.15pm - Panel discussion with the Vice-Chancellor, Dr Louise Lafortune, Professor Christopher Chen Li-Hsian and Professor Rik Henson
8.15pm - 9.00pm - Canape and networking reception

Speakers

Professor Deborah Prentice

Deborah Prentice

Professor Deborah Prentice became the University of Cambridge’s 347th Vice-Chancellor on July 1, 2023.

An eminent psychologist, Professor Prentice carried out her academic and administrative career at Princeton University, which she first joined in 1988. She rose through the academic ranks and took on administrative responsibilities of increasing scope, chairing the Department of Psychology for 12 years, serving as Dean of Faculty for three years, and then serving six years as Provost, with primary responsibility for all academic, budgetary, and long-term planning issues.

Her academic expertise is in the study of social norms that govern human behaviour – particularly the impact and development of unwritten rules and conventions, and how people respond to breaches of those rules. She has edited three academic volumes and published more than 50 articles and chapters, and she has specialised in the study of domestic violence, alcohol abuse and gender stereotypes.

The University Council nominated Professor Prentice for appointment as Vice-Chancellor in September 2022.

Dr Louise Lafortune

Dr Louise Lafortune

Dr Louise Lafortune is a Principal Research Associate at Cambridge Public Health and leads its Lifecourse and Ageing research pillar.

She believes older people should be able to live full, engaged lives in their chosen communities. Her research aims to promote healthy lifespans and equity, targeting systems, interventions and technologies that help people maintain their independence and quality of life as they age. Using a multidisciplinary lens, her recent work looks at the social return on investment of age-friendly and ageing well approaches; the mitigation of frailty in older adults; and the developing area of ageing and sustainability.

Louise is Principal Investigator (PI) for both the School for Public Health Research (SPHR) and the Social Return on Investment of Age Friendly Communities Public Health Research programme. She leads the Population Evidence and Data Science theme for the Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) East of England; co-leads the SPHR Public Mental Health programme. She currently serves on the WHO Technical Advisory Group for Measurement, Monitoring and Evaluation of the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing, and regularly sits on research/policy advisory boards and international funding panels.

She holds a dual PhD in Public Health (Université de Montreal and Université de Paris) and nine years of industry engagement in clinical trials, health economics and outcomes research.

Professor Christopher Chen (Fitzwilliam 1979)

Christopher Chen

Professor Chen is a Senior Clinician-Scientist at the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, supported by a Singapore Translational Research Investigator Award from the National Medical Research Council of Singapore.

He read for the Medical and Natural Science Tripos at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, before completing his medical training at New College, Oxford and his research training at Worcester College, Oxford and the Institute of Neurology, London. His major research and clinical interests are in blood biomarkers, neuroimaging and treatment of stroke and dementia. He has published over 500 peer-reviewed papers, leads studies on the treatment and prevention of stroke and dementia, and is a member of trial steering and safety committees.

As Director of the Memory Aging and Cognition Centre he has supervised over 40 post-graduate students, and as co-chair of the World Stroke Organisation’s Future Leaders Program hopes to enhance mentorship of young academics and clinicians globally.

In his roles as President of the Asian Society Against Dementia, Secretary Treasurer of the Asian Oceanian Association of Neurologists and Past-President of the International Society of Vascular Behavioural and Cognitive Disorders, he has built regional collaborations.

Professor Rik Henson (St John's 1989)

Rik Henson

Rik Henson is a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience, with a special interest in the brain bases of memory, aging and dementia. His first degree in Natural Sciences at Cambridge was followed by a Masters in Artificial Intelligence in Edinburgh, before returning to Cambridge for a PhD in cognitive psychology. He held postdoctoral fellowships at University College London, where he developed expertise in neuroimaging. In 2004, he returned to Cambridge, where he has led a research group at the MRC Cognition & Brain Sciences Unit (CBU), and has been Deputy and Acting Director over the years. He has been President of the British Neuroscience Association, and is a Fellow of the British Academy. He is also Director of the virtual Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (CamCAN).

Booking information

If you would like to be added to the waitlist for this event, please email globalcambridge@alumni.cam.ac.uk.

 

Capacity: 
155

Booking for this event is now closed.

Location

Conrad Centennial Singapore
2 Temasek Boulevard
Singapore
038982
Singapore
Location: 

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