
President George W. Bush selected Joseph F. Coughlin, director of MIT's AgeLab, to serve as a member of the Advisory Committee to the 2005 White House Conference on Aging.
With the more than 76 million baby boomers turning 50 at a rate of one every seven seconds, the stakes are high.
"We
may not have enough time to introduce a number of the innovations
already developed," Coughlin said. For example, new technology designed
to adapt cars to the needs of older drivers can be applied in two to
three years by automakers, but it may take a further 10 years for these
changes to percolate through the national fleet, he said.
That means the oldest baby boomers will not reap the full benefits until they are around 75. Changes to the home and community can take even longer. "The Conference on Aging offers us a rare chance to accelerate the process and help older Americans stay productive and connected," Coughlin said.
Coughlin, who joined MIT's Center for
Transportation and Logistics and Engineering Systems Division in 1997,
is also director of the U.S. Department of Transportation's New England
University Transportation Center.
Beginning with his work on older drivers, supported in part by the transportation center, he went on to establish the MIT AgeLab. The first research facility of its kind, the AgeLab brings together the public and private sectors to craft solutions for an aging population.

