How Generational Differences and Health Disparities Impact Senior Populations

About Brookdale Senior Living

Brookdale Senior Living offers multiple care levels for seniors in more than 600 communities nationwide. Brookdale helps you find the right care plan for yourself or your loved one. With amenities such as transportation services, salons and private dining rooms and activities such as gardening, fitness classes and trivia nights Brookdale caters to a wide range of interests and needs.

To better understand the impact of ageism on the perception, equity and inclusion of healthcare in the senior population, we asked Leigh-Anne Royster, Ph.D., to share her insight for Brookdale’s Optimum Life® Continuing Education Series. Dr. Royster is currently the assistant vice president for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Duke University. An educator and facilitator, she is adept at discussing health equity issues, as well as developing anti-bias and anti-oppression curriculum.

How Disparities Impact Health

Seniors experience social determinants of health differently across aspects of their individual social identities. Effective equity and inclusion practices recognize how the individual differences in health experiences — or health disparities — relate to the different caregiving and care-receiving experiences of older adults. These disparities are associated with a broad, complex and interrelated array of factors and may reflect differentiators such as age, race, ethnicity, class, disability status, gender, education and culture.

Dr. Royster explores concepts and frameworks for helping to provide equitable health experiences for seniors, including:

  • Broad strategic planning for education at every level of the organization.
  • Developing equitable policies and practices.
  • Appropriately evaluating and allocating resources toward diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) intervention strategies in your practice.

A range of negative healthcare experiences related to unconscious or implicit bias can also affect health outcomes for older adults.

These include:

  • Interpersonal interactions between individuals such as intake coordinators, nurses, medical assistants or physicians.
  • The organizational culture and climate of a healthcare facility, which may not match intended policy.
  • Healthcare system policies, written or legislated, that disadvantage older adults.

At Brookdale, we provide quality, personalized care for our residents that is intended to address their individual backgrounds and needs. To do this well, it’s essential to work together with the larger healthcare community and extend the continuum of care. To access our content experts and a Brookdale-sponsored Continuing Education session in your area, please click here. You can also download our full Continuing Education Series flyer for more details.


Inside Brookdale Communities

See what’s happening on our community Instagram pages

Find a Brookdale Community Near You
Find a Brookdale Community Near You
Chat Now