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Dr. Margaret Neal

Director, Institute on Aging

Dr. Neal is Director of the Institute on Aging and Professor of Community Health at Portland State University.

Languages : English, Spanish

BIOGRAPHY

Dr. Neal coordinates the Age-Friendly Portland (AFP) Advisory Council, which developed an action plan to create a more age-friendly Portland approved by City Council and now being implemented. This work follows on research that Dr. Neal and Dr. Alan DeLaTorre conducted in Portland as one of 33 cities in the World Health Organization's (WHO) Age-Friendly Cities project. Dr. Neal continues to work with the WHO and also AARP to identify indicators of age friendliness. She leads a service-learning program focused on aging and health in Nicaragua in conjunction with the Jessie F. Richardson Foundation, and with Dr. Paula Carder heads up the Aging Matters, Locally and Globally initiative established by alumni Drs. Keren Brown Wilson and Michael DeShane. Dr. Neal and Dr. Diana White are conducting client satisfaction studies for Multnomah County Aging and Disability services. Dr. Neal also is Co-Principal Investigator of the Oregon Geriatric Education Center with Dr. Elizabeth Eckstrom at Oregon Health & Science University. Former projects have included studies with Dr. Jennifer Dill (Urban Studies and Planning) concerning the effects of "green streets" on active aging (funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency), the current and future transportation needs of older Oregonians and the present and future rural transit needs in Oregon (funded by the Oregon Department of Transportation and the Association of Oregon Counties), and , with other colleagues in the College, a study for Metro concerning aging-related shifts in housing and transportation demand. Dr. Neal and Dr. Leslie Hammer (Psychology) also conducted a longitudinal study on working, sandwiched-generation couples, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

MEDIA APPEARANCES

Bend scores above average in age-friendly livability
The Bulletin

May 08, 2015

“Here are the opportunities when you get older,' said Margaret Neal, director of Portland State University’s Institute of Aging, who helped AARP develop the criteria used to give each neighborhood its score. She said the criteria — which are based on a report the World Health Organization released in 2007 — look at a neighborhood’s physical and social qualities to determine its suitability for older people...

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Wary of retirement housing options, some baby boomers make their own way
Oregon Live

April 17, 2015

"We're starting to see boomers ... realize they need to be proactive about how they're going to age and try to stay in their own neighborhoods," said Margaret Neal, director of the Institute on Aging at Portland State University...

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A guide to not retiring
MarketWatch

March 17, 2015

Consider Margaret Neal. At 62, the director of the Institute on Aging at Portland State University says she has no intention of retiring soon. “I am at a point in my life and career where I am loving what I am doing,” she says.Prof. Neal often works long hours — from morning to midnight — juggling projects that include the city of Portland’s involvement in the World Health Organization’s Global Network of Age-Friendly Cities and Communities, which started with a study she and her colleagues conducted in 2006. Her work, she adds, is “having an impact,” such as increased interest in developing accessible housing.As a result, Prof. Neal says, she was surprised when a colleague recently asked her about her retirement plans. “People’s assumptions that I might be thinking about retirement are coming much earlier than I expected.”...

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Is Portland 'where old people come to retire'? Real Estate Open House
Oregon Live

March 14, 2014

Margaret Neal, director of Portland State University’s Institute on Aging, said the report rings true. She cited a migration analysis from her colleagues at PSU’s Toulan School of Urban Studies & Planning that focused on young creatives but couldn’t ignore the influx of new retirement-age residents.“This trend suggests that Portland may also be the place ‘where old people come to retire,’” wrote researchers Jason Jurjevich and Greg Schrock. (By now, you're surely familiar with the "Portlandia" one-liner, "Portland is a city where young people go to retire." Here's a link to the music video anyway.)...

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Cities face a silver tsunami: Aging citizens
CBS News

July 11, 2011

"It's shocking how far behind we are, especially when you think about this fact: that if you make something age-friendly, that means it is going to be friendly for people of all ages, not just older adults," said Margaret Neal of Portland State University's Institute on Aging...

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Articles

The longitudinal effects of work-family conflict and positive spillover on depressive symptoms among dual-earner couples
Journal of occupational health psychology

2005This study assessed longitudinal and cross-sectional relationships between work-family conflict, positive spillover, and depression in a national sample of 234 dual-earner couples. The authors also assessed crossover effects (ie, the transmission of emotions, ...

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A longitudinal study of the effects of dual-earner couples' utilization of family-friendly workplace supports on work and family outcomes
Journal of Applied Psychology

2005Little research exists on the effects of the utilization of workplace supports on work-family conflict and job satisfaction. With family systems theory as a framework, 2 waves of national survey data were collected from 234 couples (N= 468) caring for children and ...

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The relationship between work-to-family conflict and family-to-work conflict: A longitudinal study
Journal of Family and Economic Issues

2004The relationship between work-to-family conflict and family-to-work conflict was tested using a longitudinal research design with 234 dual-earner couples caring for both children and aging parents. Two waves of mailed survey data were collected ...

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Gender and relationship differences in caregiving patterns and consequences among employed caregivers
The Gerontologist

1997Gender and relationship differences in caregiving (ie, for a spouse, parent, parent-in-law, other relative, or friend) are investigated among a sample of employed caregivers (N= 2,174). No gender differences were found in the provision of 7 of 13 caregiving tasks, ...

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The stability of core and peripheral networks over time
Social Networks

1997This article uses data on 'network instability'to show how differences across multiple measurements on the membership of personal networks can yield important insights into the nature of these networks. The data come from a sample of 234 recent widows, aged 59– ...

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Contact

MORE INFORMATION

Area of Expertise

Active Ageing

Ageing in Place

Education and Training

Frailty

Lifelong Learning

Public Policy

Affiliation

School of Nursing Oregon Health & Science University

Industry

Research

Education/Learning

Education

Portland State University : Gerontology, Urban Studies, Research Methods

Indiana University Bloomington : Spanish, Education

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