Online / Physical Event

International Conference on

Ageing

Theme: Innovations in the field of Ageing

Event Date & Time

Event Location

Vienna, Austria

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Performers / Professionals From Around The Globe

Tracks & Key Topics

ageing conference 2021

About Conference

After the terrific achievement of the Aging 2020 Conference with members from all around the world, Euroscicon Ltd. satisfied to report Aging Research 2021 meeting, which will occur during September 27-28, 2021 at the Dublin, Ireland.

Ageing Research 2021 incorporates first class keynote talks, Oral introductions, and Poster introductions, Workshops, Symposiums and Exhibitions. The meeting will highlight an understudy blurb session to demonstrate crafted by inventive undergrad and graduate understudies.

Ageing Research 2021 is a logical foundation of Geriatricians, Gerontologists, Doctors, Professors, Social Workers, Palliative Care Specialists, Nurses, Health Care Administrators, Researchers and Students, where they can share and examine their thoughts, information, research, accomplishments and headways of Ageing science and gerontology field.

The fundamental point of the meeting is to give a logical stage to talk about the new thoughts for Ageing and gerontology field. Grow the human system all around in this field. Give a chance to proficient improvement to the early profession began gerontologists.

Theme: Innovations in the field of Ageing

Main Sessions

1. Genetics of Ageing

Ageing is an outcome of the pleiotropic effects of genes that specify other processes. The first pathway shown to influence ageing in animals was the insulin/ IGF-1 pathway. For several years, the molecular biologists who deal with the regulatory mechanisms did not seem to be interested to study ageing. But now we see that the process of ageing is subject to regulation by classical signalling pathways and numerous transcription factors. The discovery of these pathways was first done in short-lived organisms such as yeast and flies. There were many discoveries done to bring about the drugs which could slow down the process of ageing. Researchers say that mutations which slow down the process of ageing also lead to delay of age-related diseases.

One of the significant theories in ageing genetics is the DNA damage theory of Ageing. It explains that the consequence of an undamaged accumulation of naturally occurring DNA damages is termed as ageing. Here, damage means a slight alteration in the DNA having an abnormal structure. Both mitochondrial, as well as nuclear DNA damage, contribute to ageing, the main target here is the nuclear DNA damage as it contributes directly by increasing the cell dysfunction or indirectly by apoptosis (cell death).

Werner Syndrome (adult progeria) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder which is considered as the appearance of premature ageing. The changes found in the Gene transcription of Werner Syndrome are analogous to the Genes observed in normal ageing.

2. Senescence

The method by which the cells stop dividing irreversibly and get a permanent growth arrest without the process of cell death is known as Senescence. This process can be delayed and prevented. There are few conditions such as Syndrome X, where in this condition, a person remains mentally and physically a child throughout his/her life.

Environmental factors can also account to the cause of ageing. Some of the factors include over exposure to UV Radiation which leads to skin ageing. Different parts of the body may age at different rates. Of the 150,000 people who die each day, about 100,000 per day die of age-related factors namely senescence.

Causes of senescence include gene expression changes, damage which is caused by biological processes etc. The ongoing research is still in a dilemma if the senescence as a biological process itself can be slowed down or reversed or completely put to a halt. The mechanism for preventing the proliferation of potential cancer cells is called Cellular Senescence. It promotes tissue repair associated with ageing and cancer progression and suppresses tumorigenesis. The four complex biological processes associated with cellular senescence include,

Tumour suppression

Tumour promotion

Ageing

Tissue Repair

The only way to understand the response of senescence well enough to accelerate its benefits and decelerate its drawbacks.

3. Ageing Demographics

Ageing Demographics also known as Population Ageing is the increase in age of a population confined to a particular region which may be due to rising life expectancy or declining potential natality. The population of aged is by far the highest in human history. Since 1950, the number of people above 60 years of age has increased three-fold, reaching 600 million in 2000 and exceeding 700 million in 2006. A study says that the Geriatric population will reach 2.1 billion by 2050.

The population aged 60 years and above was estimated to be 605 million in 2000 and is predicted to grow to nearly 2 billion by 2050. Persons aged 60 or older currently accounts for 10 per cent of the world’s population. Developed countries have a higher percentage compared to the developing countries accounting to 20 per cent and 8 per cent respectively. The least developed countries only account for 5 per cent. Greece and Italy are the countries which have a high number of aged people. By 2050, we can see that many European countries will also have the same demographics.  The final statistics of old age will make up to 22 per cent of the world population, 33 per cent in developed regions and 12 per cent in the underdeveloped regions. When regions are taken into consideration, the majority of the world’s aged people reside in Asia accounting to 53 per cent, next comes Europe with 24 per cent. Research states that by 2050, Asia’s share of the older population will increase to 63 per cent while Europe will show a decrease from 24 per cent to 11 per cent.

4. Cognitive Ageing

As we get older, our psychological and cognitive capacities bit by bit disintegrate. A specific sum of cognitive decrease is a typical piece of maturing/ageing. A few people, in any case, will encounter a serious weakening in intellectual abilities, prompting dementia (memory loss). This can make it difficult to adapt to common everyday tasks. Since we're living longer, it's more probable that we, or somebody near us, will experience the ill effects of dementia.

Normal Cognitive Ageing hides the fact that there are pretty much fruitful directions of intellectual change as individuals grow older. Recognizing the hazard factors for, and components of, singular contrasts in age-related intellectual decrease is among the best difficulties to enhancing the soundness of more seasoned individuals. The range of decay ranges from normal cognitive ageing to the dementias.

Cognitive Ageing is a complex methodology. There is a little age-related decrease in some psychological capacities and mental functions, for example, vocabulary, numerical abilities, and general information—yet other mental abilities decline from middle age onwards, or considerably prior. These functions are basic for doing regular exercises, living freely, and for general wellbeing and prosperity. A further three discoveries are striking. First, different aspects of age-related decline occur together. Second, impeded speed of information processing and data handling represents an extensive extent of age-related decrease in every single intellectual area. This abating of speed of mind processing starts in young adulthood. Third, the capacity to plan and attempt numerous regular exercises has all the allocates of being delicate to maturing, and especially striking disabilities in double entrusting or multitasking seem to flag the beginning of dementia. There is a huge demonstrative gap in this inexorably extensive medical issue: the natural establishments of cognitive ageing over the range, impeded data preparing, and multitasking, are unknown.

5. Ageing Technology

With a standpoint to future potential outcomes and early innovations in the fields of robotics, smart sensors, neural interfaces, and computerized reasoning, technology has come a long way. Targets and Prerequisites to build up the role of technology for ageing, it is necessary first to consider the foundational goals and requirements, preoccupied from a specific mechanical approach usage, for a protected and safe environment. It is well-known fact that technology has a great impact on health care and can support the ageing population ranging from digital tools to artificial intelligence. For instance, patients would now be able to utilize virtual reality for physical exercise and pain treatment, a clinical outcome resulting from telemedicine interventions. These trends will allow older adults to successfully age in place since the vast majority of people want to age in their current homes and communities. If emerging technologies are accessible to all (especially if older adults are at the forefront of strategy), there will be a culture shift in healthcare. Looking to the future, the use of innovative advances ought to be precisely examined. The foundation of the baselines whereupon to benchmark the social and utilitarian estimation of new ageing set up help innovation-based frameworks and administrations is especially suggested. With a specific end goal to put the best possible part for the innovation for ageing, it is essential initially to think about the underlying destinations of such advancements.

6. Ageing Disorders

Ageing is a complex process of amassing of damage and is the major chance for the overwhelming executioner illnesses in developed nations. A later breakthrough is the revelation that changes in single potentials can deliver a broad-spectrum improvement in solid ageing in creatures’ models. These discoveries could lead to the development of an idle, broad-spectrum, preventative medicine for the illnesses of ageing. These are early days for ageing research, it is a younger field compared with research into the distinct diseases of ageing which is called as Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease. However, despite the relatively long period of research and the larger international research community, there are still no defensive and limited relaxing treatments for these conditions so there is a major involvement of ageing research, as shown by a rise in the number of organizations and international meetings devoted to ageing research. Ageing not only decreases the quality of life, but it also seems to motivate diverse ageing- related diseases.

7. Geriatrics and Mental Health

Palliative Care is a multidisciplinary way to deal with specific medical and nursing care for individuals with life-constraining sicknesses. It centres around giving relief from the manifestations, torment, physical pressure, and mental worry of a terminal diagnosis. The objective is to enhance personal satisfaction for both the individual and their family. Palliative care is given by a group of doctors, medical attendants, nurses, physiotherapists, word related advisors and other health experts who cooperate with the essential care doctor and specialists and hospice staff to give extra help. It is appropriate at any age and at any phase in a genuine sickness and can be given as the fundamental objective of care or alongside healing treatment. Despite the fact that it is a vital piece of end-of-life mind, it isn't restricted to that stage. Palliative care can be given over different settings incorporating into healing centres, at home, as a major aspect of group palliative care programs, and in gifted nursing offices. Interdisciplinary palliative care groups work with individuals and their families to elucidate objectives of care and give side effect administration, psycho-social, and otherworldly help.

8. Geriatric Nutrition

The ageing process alters body creation with the goal that nourishing status changes as per our developing age. The ageing process demonstrates interindividual fluctuation in its rate of advancement. Untimely maturing (premature ageing) of cells and tissues is because of hereditary factors and long-term exposure to a physical or chemical environment which is the reason for irreversible tissue harm. Early ageing and geriatric sickness foreshorten life; however, both can be foreseen to some degree by eating fewer carbs or by changing eating routine and exercise. Diseases that can be forestalled, giving us a more prominent shot of accomplishing our hereditarily decided life expectancies, incorporate nourishing lack states and endless eating regimen related sicknesses, for example, non-insulin-subordinate diabetes, hypertension, coronary vein infection, and tumour. Incapacities coming about because of these diseases and from degenerative joint pain are additionally subjected to balance by eating less. The nourishing prerequisites of the elderly are for the most part like those of more youthful individuals. Elderly as a rule require fewer calories and supplement admissions in contrast to youthful individuals. Elderly with higher requirements for particular supplements incorporate homebound or standardized individuals who need daylight presentation and hence require more vitamin D. Nutritious necessities to advance longer future and opportunity from incapacities that result from incessant illness incorporate limitation of sustenance vitality and fat. Nourishing review of the elderly is gone for recognizing the closeness of inadequacy states as well as conditions of supplement overabundance and endless eating routine related illnesses. There are issues in the implementation of nourishing appraisal in the elderly, however, methods are currently accessible which make substantial evaluation possible even in the most seasoned old. The individuals who live longest have a less hereditary danger of untimely ageing, yet because of local knowledge, training, adapting abilities, and higher financial status, they likewise have a more prominent probability of eating a diet that best meets their nutrition requirements. Malnutrition is found in elderly in our general public who live in their own homes on the off chance that they are destitute, confined, and homebound due to disability.

9. Life Extension Science

Life extension science (anti-ageing medicine) can also be termed as uncertain life augmentation, exploratory gerontology, and biomedical gerontology is defined as the investigation of slowing down or reversing the procedures of ageing to broaden both the most extreme and normal life expectancy. The capacity to accomplish this, be that as it may, does not presently exist. A few specialists around there, and "life extensionists", "immortalists" or "longevists" (the individuals who wish to accomplish longer lives themselves), trust that future breakthroughs in tissue restoration, undifferentiated cells, regenerative drug, sub-atomic repair, quality treatment, pharmaceuticals, and organ substitution (for example, with artificial organs or xenotransplantations) will, in the end, enable people to have inconclusive life expectancies (agerasia) through complete rejuvenation to a well youthful condition. The moral implications, if life augmentation turns into a possibility, are argued by bioethicists. The expansion of life has been a want of mankind and a pillar theme ever.

10. Health Science and Geriatrics

Geriatrics or Geriatric Medicine is a claim to fame that spotlights on human services of elderly individuals. It expects to advance wellbeing by averting and treating ailments and inabilities in more established grown-ups. There is no set age at which patients might be under the care of a geriatrician, or geriatric doctor, a doctor who spends significant time in the care of elderly individuals. Or maybe, this choice is dictated by the individual patient's needs and the accessibility of an expert. It is critical to take note of the difference between geriatrics, the care of matured individuals, and Gerontology, which is simply the investigation of the Ageing Procedure. Geriatrics term originated from the Greek word geron (old man), and iatros (healer). In any case, geriatrics is every so often called remedial gerontology.

11. Clinical Trials of Ageing

Intercessions that target principal maturing process can possibly change human wellbeing and health care. An assortment of hopeful medications has risen up out of essential and translational research that may target ageing forms. Some of these medications such as metformin and rapamycin are as of now in clinical use for different purposes. In any case, outlining clinical trials to test mediations that aim the ageing procedure poses a special arrangement of difficulties. The results of a universal gathering co-ordinated by the NIH-supported Geroscience Network to promote the goal of building up a translational pipeline to move candidate compounds through clinical trials and at last into utilization. A few medications as of now in clinical utilize may target key ageing forms. The plan standards of clinical trials to test such medications in humans, incorporate investigation populaces and intercessions. For instance, a few situations for potential clinical trials fixated on the ideas of wellbeing range and flexibility (reaction to or recuperation from intense wellbeing stress). At long last, the plan of the proposed Targeting Ageing with Metformin contemplate has been examined.

12. Theories of Ageing

There are many theories of Ageing. In 1990 Mevdevev in a brilliant analysis identified that there were more than 300 theories of ageing and the number is increasing. This is the natural importance of the fact that we are rapidly improving our understanding of the natural occurrences that are connected with ageing using new investigational procedures and ideas. In fact, nearly any major finding in cellular and molecular biology has given rise to a new family of theories of ageing or to enhanced versions of old ones. Thus, the task of revising these theories is becoming more difficult because they are either very selective or they are now old fashioned. This was pointed out by Vijg and Muller. Some of the old theories of ageing placed the ground for the big scientific revolution of ageing, which happens in our days. We believe that the belief of a combined theory which includes all the phenomena related with ageing this evaluation, to offer an initial solution to the problem of offering acceptable theories of ageing, which can monitor new investigates that will increase our understanding of ageing at the various levels of biological association. The cellular theory of ageing assumes that the ageing procedure is the result of the incapability of various types of stem cells to continue to reload the tissues of an organism with functional distinguished cells capable of continuation that tissue's original function. Damage and error accumulation in genetic material is always a problem for systems irrespective of the age.

13. Geroscience

Geroscience is the relationship between natural ageing and age-related ailments and diverse conditions at the sub-nuclear level, which decrease the quality of life. Since ageing is the huge purpose behind most routine unending ailments and conditions, a perception of the piece of maturing in the first place and development of disease should open new roads for avoidance, enhancement, and cure of various constant conditions through intervention in their hidden reason, ageing itself. Geroscience is in this manner a focus of bio-gerontology, however its examination traverse’s different orders including sub-atomic science, neuroscience, protein science, cell science, hereditary qualities, endocrinology, pharmacology, arithmetic, and others. The collective objective is to understand the part of ageing in age-related loss of personal satisfaction and quality of life and susceptibility to infections and diseases.

14. Ageing and Immune Systems

A standout amongst the most perceived results of ageing is a decrease in resistant capacity. The impacts of ageing on the insusceptible framework are obvious at numerous levels. These incorporate reductions in the generation of B and T cells in bone marrow and thymus and decreased capacity of developed lymphocytes in optional lymphoid tissues. The impacts of ageing on the insusceptible framework are across the board and influence the rate at which B and T cells are delivered and additionally the creation and nature of the developed lymphocyte pool. The fundamental objective is to review recent advances, with an emphasis on versatile resistance, in the understanding of the cellular and molecular procedures underlying these age-induced changes and discuss their effects for the design of policies to rejuvenate the immune system in the elderly. We can see that; Elderly people don't react to resistant test as intensely as the youth. The foremost objective of ageing research is to outline the cellular changes that occur in the immune system.

The deterioration of the immune system with ageing is very much perceived. The advancement of protein-energy malnutrition can further cause disintegration in the immune system, bringing about a drastic decrease in CD4+ T cells. Both nutritional supplementation and exercise have been exhibited to help boost the immune system, more seasoned people (old people) have all the qualities of being especially powerless to Bacillus anthracis when utilized as a device of bioterrorism. As may be normal, more seasoned people have more unfortunate results when presented to a portion of the new irresistible sickness episodes, for example, West Nile Virus and SARS. Transfusion-related West Nile infection is more typical in more established than in more youthful people. This helps all of us to remember the significance of immunization against flu in our more seasoned populace.

Related Associations and Universities

Ageing Societies in USA:

Geriatric Medicine - Section of the UEMS|International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics for the European Region|Ageing ConferencesAgeing Nepal|Geriatric ConferencesAlzheimer Societies in CanadaGeriatric Medicine ConferencesAlliance for Aging ResearchAlberta Association on GerontologyGerontology Conferences|Canadian Gerontological Nursing AssociationCanadian Coalition for Seniors' Mental HealthCanadian Association on Gerontology |International Ageing Conferences|Alzheimer’s Foundation of America’s|Alzheimer's AssociationAmerican Geriatrics SocietyHealthy Ageing ConferencesAmerican Federation for Aging ResearchAmerican Association for Geriatric Psychiatry | Ageing ConferencesAmerican Aging Association | Arizona Geriatrics Society|American Society on AgingGeriatric ConferencesAustralian Association of GerontologyA5M MEDICAL EDUCATIONAcademy for Gerontology in Higher EducationEmerging Researchers in AgeingGeriatric Medicine Conferences|Dallas Area Gerontological Society|Georgia Gerontology Society|Gerontology ConferencesDeutschen Gesellschaft für Alternsforschung|Gerontological Nurses Association of British ColumbiaInternational Ageing ConferencesHealthy Aging Association|Hawaii Pacific Gerontological Society|International Council on Active Aging|Ageing ConferencesInternational Federation on AgingParkinson Society British ColumbiaGeriatric Conferences|Parkinson AllianceParkinson's FoundationGeriatric Medicine ConferencesNational Association for Professional GerontologistsNational Caucus and Center on Black Aging|Gerontology ConferencesCreative Retirement ManitobaAging In Place|International Ageing Conferences|National Archive of Computerized Data on AgingLEADERSHIP COUNCIL OF AGING ORGANIZATIONSHealthy Ageing ConferencesHealthandAge.orgWayne State UniversityInstitute of Gerontology|Ageing ConferencesSeniorLiving.org |Florida Department of Elder Affairs|Cyber-Seniors : Connecting Generations Inc.Geriatric Medicine Conferences|Mortgage Broker Calgary | BrightFocus FoundationYork University Centre for Aging Research and Education|Gerontology ConferencesDonald Berman Maimonides Geriatric Centre|Canadian Centre for Activity and Aging|International Ageing Conferences|Gilbrea Centre for Studies in Aging|Université de MonctonMcMaster University  | American Geriatrics Society

European Ageing Society:

The German Centre of Gerontology|Ageing ConferencesDeutsche Gesellschaft für Gerontologie und Geriatrie e.V.| Geriatric Conferences|European Network in Aging Studies |European Society of Preventive Regenerative And Anti- Ageing Medicine|Geriatric Medicine Conferences|"European Geriatric Medicine Society”|Ageing ConferencesALZHEIMER'S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL | Gerontology ConferencesBritish Geriatrics Society|Alzheimer EuropeInternational Ageing ConferencesAlzheimer's Society|Healthy Ageing Conferences|Gerontology Conferences | European Geriatric Medicine SocietyAgeing ConferencesResearch Network on Ageing in EuropeGeriatric Conferences|French Society of Geriatrics and GerontologyGeriatric Medicine ConferencesRoyal Society of Medicine|Geriatric Conferences | International Federation of Associations of the ElderlyGerontology Medicine Conferences|Berliner AltersstudieAgeing ConferencesAge & OpportunityAge Action IrelandGeriatric Conferences|University of ReadingGerontology Medicine ConferencesCambridge University PressAge UKInrternational Ageing ConferencesAge of Creativity|Age Action AllianceAgeing Conferences | Action on Elder Abuse|AbbeyfieldAgeing ConferencesBeth Johnson FoundationAlzheimer Scotland - Action on Dementia|ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE INTERNATIONALGeriatric Medicine Conferences|Gerontology ConferencesBritish Columbia Psychogeriatric Association|British Society of GerontologyBritish Society for Research on Ageing|Gerontology Medicine Conferences|British Longevity SocietySchool of Social SciencesUniversity of SouthamptonGerontology ConferencesCentre for Ageing BetterCarers UK|Ageing ConferencesCare EnglandCare & Repair EnglandContact the Elderly|Ageing Conferences | Dementia Services Development CentreGeriatric ConferencesEuropean Research Area In AgeingEnglish Longitudinal Study of Ageing | Geriatric Conferences | The EldersGeriatric Medicine Conferences|International Longevity CentreInstitute for AgeingIndependent AgeHealthy Ageing ConferencesHelpAge InternationalGerontology Conferences|Housing & Care 21Hanover Housing AssociationAgeing ConferencesOxford Institute of Population AgeingGeriatric Conferences |  OPAAL UKNational Pensioners ConventionNational Care ForumThe Third Age TrustTurn2us|Gerontology ConferencesPENSIONS AND LIFETIME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION|Age Action IrelandAge & Opportunity|ARK Ageing ProgrammeThe Alzheimer Society of Ireland | ALONEAll-Ireland Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care|Ageing Conferences | All Ireland Gerontological Nurses Association |Centre for Ageing Research and Development in IrelandAgeing ConferencesFriends of the Elderly IrelandEuropean Academy for Medicine of Ageing | Irish Society of Physicians in Geriatric Medicine |Geriatric ConferencesThe Irish Society of Chartered PhysiotherapistsIrish Gerontological Society and Irish Social Policy AssociationCentre for Gerontology and Rehabilitation|Gerontology Conferences | THE IRISH HOSPICE FOUNDATIONGeriatric Conferences | Geriatric Medicine ConferencesIrish Centre for Social GerontologySolicitors for the Elderly IrelandBord Altranais agus Cnáimhseachais na hÉireann,  Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland |Gerontology ConferencesNational Centre for the Protection of Older PeopleEstonian Association of Gerontology and GeriatricsAgeing Conferences | Danish Gerontological SocietyL-Università ta' MaltaAgeing ConferencesInstitute of Gerontology|Secretariat of the Institute of GerontologyGerontological Society of SerbiaGeriatric Conferences | Société Française de Gériatrie et Gérontologie |Healthy Ageing ConferencesItalian Society of RheumatologyHouston Gerontological SocietyAcronym Finder|International Ageing Conferences|Gerontology Conferences |Geriatric Conferences

Ageing Societies in Asia:

Indian Gerontological Association|Ageing ConferencesGerontological Society of SingaporeGerontology ConferencesHelpAge NGO in India|Geriatric Medicine ConferencesTokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology|Ageing ConferencesIrish Gerontological SocietyGerontology Conferences|Kentucky Association for Gerontology|Geriatric ConferencesLewy Body Dementia AssociationGeriatric Medicine ConferencesMaine Gerontological SocietyGerontology ConferencesMalaysian Healthy Ageing SocietyMaryland Gerontological AssociationMassachusetts Gerontology AssociationAgeing ConferencesMichigan Society of GerontologyMinnesota Gerontological SocietyAgeing ConferencesAgeing ConferencesNational Association of Geriatric Education | Geriatric ConferencesNational Council on Aging|Geriatric Medicine ConferencesNew Age Research FoundationInternational Ageing ConferenceAgeing Conferences|Healthy Ageing ConferencesGeriatric ConferencesOregon Gerontological AssociationInternational Ageing ConferencesOhio Association of Gerontology and Education |SENS Research FoundationGeriatric Medicine ConferencesHong Kong Geriatrics SocietyAgeing ConferencesVital Aging NetworkWisconsin Institute for Healthy AgingAgeing Conferences

Universities of Ageing in Europe:                    

Maastricht University |  International conferences on aging and gerontology|Ageing conferences |Cologne Graduate School for Ageing Research |Venice International University | Ageing Conferences |European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing Lund University  |Ageing ConferencesGeriatric Medicine ConferencesUniversity of Southampton|Geriatric Conferences |International conferences on aging and gerontology|Oxford Institute of Population Ageing University of Malta Russell Group Spring University Prague | Ageing and Mobility|Gerontology Conferences|  The University of Sheffield | International conferences on aging and gerontology|The European Academy For Medicine of AgeingInternational Ageing ConferencesTrinity College Dublin|Ageing Conferences | The University of DublinLancaster UniversityHealthy Ageing ConferencesBournemouth UniversityUniversity of Cambridge| Kings College LondonAgeing Conferences | International conferences on aging and gerontologyAgeing Conferences

Universities of Ageing in Asia:

Miami University  | Keele University |Ageing ConferencesMacEwan University | Ageing Conferences|University of Nebraska OmahaGeriatric ConferencesLingnan University |Geriatric Medicine Conferences|NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY | Gerontology Conferences|University of MichiganInternational Ageing ConferencesThe University of Hong KongAgeing Conferences|Institute of Gerontology, The University of TokyoAgeing Conferences | Healthy Ageing ConferencesUniversity of Chester | Japan Center for International ExchangeRegent University | Ageing ConferencesGeriatric Conferences|Korean Geriatrics SocietyThe University of Melbourne | Seoul National University|Geriatric Medicine ConferencesNagoya UniversityGerontology Conferences|Geriatric Medicine ConferencesMahidol UniversityUniversity at Albany|Gerontology ConferencesAzusa Pacific University | Ageing and Nutrition

Universities of Ageing in Australia:

Lawson College Australia | Ageing Conferences | Australian Learning Group|TMG College AustraliaAustralasian Lawrence Aged Care CollegeGeriatric Conferences|  Institute of Health and Nursing AustraliaGerontology ConferencesAgeing Conferences|Australian Institute of Technical Training|Lifetime International Training College|Geriatric Medicine ConferencesHealth Careers InternationalGeriatric ConferenceAustralia Institute of Business and Technology Queensford CollegeCharlton BrownAgeing ConferencesTAFE Western Australia|TasTAFEGeriatric Medicine ConferencesAustralian Academy of Vocational Education and TradesAgeing ConferencesImagine Education AustraliaGerontology Conferences|DNA Kingston TrainingGeriatric Medicine ConferencesMenzies Institute of TechnologyHealthy Ageing ConferencesOpen Training and EducationNetwork TAFE | Queensland|TAFE SAFlinders UniversityCQ University AustraliaCharles Sturt UniversityHealthy Ageing Confernces|Kirana CollegesQueensland International InstituteAgeing ConferencesEducation Training and Employment AustraliaGerontology ConferencesKing's Institute of Management and TechnologyAgeing ConferencesStanley CollegeAustralian Professional Skills InstituteThe University of Western Australia|International Ageing ConferencesThe University of SydneyGeriatric ConferencesFrailty/Sarcopenia | The University of AdelaideCharles Sturt UniversityThe University of Melbourne|Geriatric ConferencesCharles Sturt University |The University of Queensland|Ageing ConferencesUniversity of South AustraliaGeriatric Medicine ConferencesCurtin UniversityMonash UniversityGeriatric Medicine ConferencesAustralian College of Nursing University of WisconsinThe University of Notre Dame Australia|Gannon UniversityAgeing Conferences|Academy for Gerontology in Higher EducationGeriatric Medicine ConferenceCQ University Australia|Lethbridge CollegeThe University of Newcastle | Ageing and Immune Systems

Universities of Ageing in Africa:

University of SouthamptonAgeing ConferencesThe Albertina and Walter Sisulu Institute of Ageing in Africa|Geriatric ConferencesUniversity of South CarolinaAgeing Conference|North-West UniversityUniversity of Pittsburgh School of Medicine|Shippensburg UniversityGerontology ConferencesAshford University|Valparaiso UniversityGeriatric Medicine ConferencesGeorge Mason University|UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLEHoward UniversityInternational Ageing ConferencesUniversity of Southern CaliforniaAgeing ConferencesSystems in Geriatrics | Georgia State University|Swansea UniversityHealthy Ageing ConferencesEast Carolina University|Grand Canyon UniversityWalden University

Universities of Ageing in USA:

Ageing ConferencesThe University of ScrantonHenderson State UniversityAgeing ConferencesMiami UniversityUniversity of Otago|Gerontology conferencesWayne State UniversityUniversity of Arkansas at Pine BluffGeriatric Medicine Conference|McGill University Health CentreAgeing ConferencesNortheastern Illinois UniversityUniversity Avenue West WaterlooSimon Fraser University |Ageing and Cardiovascular Disease

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