Sharon Inouye, M.D., MPH is Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Milton & Shirley F. Levy Family Chair and Director of the Aging Brain Center at the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife.
Dr. Inouye is the Editor-in-Chief of JAMA Internal Medicine.…
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Sharon Inouye, M.D., MPH is Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Milton & Shirley F. Levy Family Chair and Director of the Aging Brain Center at the Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife.
Dr. Inouye is the Editor-in-Chief of JAMA Internal Medicine. Dr. Inouye has made a significant impact on health and medicine through her seminal research in cognitive disorders of aging, including delirium and dementia, and through her leadership in health innovation. She has combined her clinical acumen with expertise in epidemiology, public health, and public policy to revolutionize the way we provide clinical care for older adults.
As a preeminent physician-scientist, Dr. Inouye has been continuously funded by the National Institutes of Health since 1989. She has held >90 grants, including a current >$13 million NIH-P01 grant and a >$10 million PCORI contract. She has published >400 articles, many in the highest impact journals (H-index =116), named by Thomson Reuters ScienceWatch as one of the World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds of the Decade, and Best Female Scientists in the World 2022 Ranking by Research.com.
Among her many honors and recognitions are the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine Award
from the Arnold P. Gold Foundation (2005), the Henderson Award from the American Geriatrics Society (2013), the M. Powell Lawton Award from the Gerontological Society of America (2015), Honorary Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing (2018), PBS-Next Avenue Influencer of Aging (2020), and the American College of Physicians John Phillips Memorial Award for Outstanding Work in Clinical Medicine (2023). She is an elected member of the American Society of Clinical Investigation (ASCI), the Association of American Physicians (AAP) and the National Academy of Medicine (NAM). She currently serves on the NASEM Health Care Services Board, and on NACA-NIA Council.
A dedicated teacher and mentor, she has individually mentored over 120 research trainees. Board-certified in internal medicine and geriatric medicine, she has dedicated her career to serving vulnerable and underserved older and homeless populations.
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