Jill Weiss
Teaching Professor in the Knight Foundation School of Computing and Information Sciences at Florida International University, with decades of experience in computer education, consulting, programming, training, and teaching large-scale introductory computing courses.
Brain Health Care Is Shifting From Late Treatment to Integrated Prevention
At an Aspen Ideas Festival panel, Arianna Huffington, Richard Isaacson and Wendy Bartie argued that brain health should be treated as an integrated prevention problem rather than a late-life specialty concern. Using Alzheimer’s, mental health, workplace stress and drug development as reference points, they made the case for earlier risk detection, more specific behavioral prescriptions, continued pharmaceutical innovation and care models that expand access. Their shared warning was that separating medicine from daily behavior, or innovation from access, leaves the central problem only partly addressed.
Brain Health Moves From Late-Life Treatment to Preventive System Design
Arianna Huffington, Bristol Myers Squibb’s Wendy Bartie, and neurologist Richard Isaacson argue that brain health should be treated as a continuum running from everyday cognition and mental health to Alzheimer’s disease, not as a set of isolated conditions. Their case is that prevention, medicines, testing, workplace design, and access to care have to be connected, because daily behaviors such as sleep, exercise, food, stress reduction, and social connection can shape risk and may strengthen medical treatment rather than compete with it.
Brain Health Care Is Moving From Late-Stage Treatment to Early Prevention
At Aspen Ideas: Health, Arianna Huffington, preventive neurologist Richard Isaacson and Bristol Myers Squibb executive Wendy Bartie argued that brain health should be treated as a lifelong continuum, not a late-life dementia problem or a separate mental-health category. Their case was that earlier risk detection, specific daily interventions such as sleep, exercise and nutrition, new medicines, and less fragmented systems of care need to work together. Bartie put the access test bluntly: innovation matters only if people can actually reach it.