In a significant development within the field of geriatric emergency medicine, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) and its Health in Aging Foundation have announced Dr. Cameron J. Gettel, MD, MHS, as the recipient of the 2026 Jeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Award for Emerging Investigators in Surgical and Related Medical Specialties. Dr. Gettel, serving as an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Yale School of Medicine, has been recognized for his pioneering work that intersects geriatrics, emergency care, and the critical transitions of care for older adults. This accolade, presented at the 2026 AGS Virtual Annual Scientific Meeting scheduled from April 30th to May 2nd, marks a milestone in acknowledging transformative research addressing the complex health needs of an aging population within acute care settings.
Dr. Gettel’s research portfolio embodies a robust integration of clinical inquiry and practical innovation focusing on the unique challenges faced by older adults in emergency departments (EDs). His efforts emphasize developing patient-reported outcome measures tailored to the geriatric population, a necessary pivot in emergency medicine traditionally oriented towards immediate diagnosis and treatment rather than longitudinal outcomes. By centering the patient’s and caregiver’s perspectives, Dr. Gettel advances a holistic and personalized approach to emergency care that transcends episodic treatment and targets improved clinical trajectories, particularly for vulnerable populations exhibiting cognitive impairment.
This work is especially crucial given the prevalence of care fragmentation observed during transitions from hospital-based acute care back to the community. Dr. Gettel’s exploration of these care gaps reveals significant disparities that contribute to adverse health outcomes, including readmissions and increased morbidity among older patients. His investigations extend to evaluating rural-urban disparities, highlighting accessibility issues and boarding times within emergency departments—factors that disproportionately affect seniors and complicate the continuity of care. By systematically quantifying these variables, he constructs evidence-based frameworks to inform policy enhancements aimed at mitigating systemic inefficiencies and improving equity in healthcare delivery.
Moreover, Dr. Gettel’s contributions have had a tangible influence on national healthcare standards and policies. His involvement with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) includes shaping the Hospital Star Ratings and introducing emergency medicine-specific pathways within the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). Such national-level engagements underscore the translational impact of his research, connecting empirical data with policy mechanisms that incentivize quality improvement in geriatric emergency care. This interface between research and health policy positions Dr. Gettel as a pivotal figure in remodeling how aging patients navigate complex healthcare systems.
At Yale, Dr. Gettel balances his clinical and research responsibilities as a Clinical Investigator affiliated with the Yale Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation. His current projects reflect an innovative embrace of digital health technologies aimed at optimizing emergency department to community transitions. Leveraging cutting-edge digital interventions, his programs focus on enhancing the continuity of care for individuals living with cognitive impairments and their caregivers, addressing critical gaps in communication, monitoring, and support that often contribute to post-discharge complications and caregiver burden.
Dr. Gettel’s recognitions, including a National Institute on Aging GEMSSTAR R03 award and the Beeson Award (K76), validate his emerging prominence in the field of geriatric emergency medicine. These awards provide both funding and formal acknowledgment of the scientific rigor and potential clinical impact inherent in his work. Importantly, they enable the continuation and expansion of his research into scalable interventions capable of transforming emergency care practices for older adults nationally.
His academic leadership extends beyond research. As Co-Director of the Yale Emergency Scholars (YES) Program, Dr. Gettel mentors the next generation of researchers committed to enhancing emergency care for older populations. His mentorship fosters a pipeline of clinician-scientists equipped to tackle the multifaceted challenges of aging and acute care delivery, ensuring that innovations in geriatrics are sustained by rigorous scientific inquiry and clinical expertise.
In 2023, Dr. Gettel garnered significant attention at the AGS Annual Scientific Meeting by presenting a plenary paper comparing outcomes between geriatric and general emergency departments. This study, selected among the top submissions of more than a thousand abstracts, shed light on the efficacy and value of specialized geriatric emergency units, providing compelling evidence that tailored emergency environments can improve patient outcomes. This contribution underscores the critical role of specialized care models in addressing the heterogeneity of the older adult patient population in emergency settings.
Supporting his research are numerous awards and grants reflecting a focus on outcome measurement and care improvement initiatives. His receipt of the Health in Aging Foundation New Investigator Award, the Yale OAIC Pepper Center Scholar Award, the NIA-funded IMPACT Collaboratory Career Development Award, and the Alzheimer’s Association ARCOM Award exemplify a career trajectory dedicated to melding clinical relevance with scientific innovation. Each award bolsters facets of his research, reinforcing the multidimensional strategy necessary to address the complexities of aging and emergency care.
Dr. Gettel’s work epitomizes an emergent paradigm in emergency medicine where the acute presentation is not an isolated episode but part of a continuum of care that necessitates coordination, monitoring, and personalization. His focus on vulnerable subpopulations, particularly those with cognitive impairments, amplifies a commitment to equity and sensitivity in medical care delivery. The integration of digital health technologies as part of his intervention strategies signifies a forward-thinking adaptation to the evolving landscape of healthcare, where technology is harnessed to bridge systemic gaps and enhance patient-centered outcomes.
The recognition of Dr. Gettel through the Jeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Award highlights the growing importance and acknowledgment of geriatric expertise within surgical and medical specialties traditionally less focused on aging. This award honors emerging leaders whose research propels advancements benefiting the aging population, urging a landscape where multidisciplinary collaboration and geriatric principles inform all areas of healthcare service provision.
Founded in 1942, the American Geriatrics Society represents a cornerstone organization dedicated to enhancing the health and quality of life for older adults. Through initiatives like the Jeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Award and the annual scientific meeting, the AGS fosters innovation, education, and advocacy essential for confronting the demographic and clinical challenges of an aging society. The AGS invites healthcare professionals from diverse disciplines to join in this mission, promoting interprofessional collaboration and systemic reforms to eradicate biases and disparities affecting older adults and their caregivers.
The 2026 AGS Virtual Annual Scientific Meeting serves as a cutting-edge forum for disseminating state-of-the-art research, advancing clinical care, and fostering professional growth. With over 2,600 health professionals from nursing, pharmacy, medicine, social work, and other disciplines, the meeting catalyzes the integration of novel research findings into everyday clinical practice. Dr. Gettel’s award presentation therein not only honors his contributions but also amplifies the visibility and importance of geriatric-focused emergency medicine in the broader medical community.
As the aging population continues to expand, innovations in emergency care tailored to their needs will become increasingly vital. Dr. Cameron J. Gettel’s pioneering efforts embody a transformative approach—combining outcome measurement, health disparities research, policy impact, digital interventions, and mentorship—to ensure that the emergency care system evolves to support healthful aging. His work sets a precedent and a call to action for continued research and systemic adaptation aimed at optimizing the healthcare journey of older adults nationally and globally.
Subject of Research: Geriatric emergency care, care transitions, patient-reported outcomes, health disparities, cognitive impairment interventions, healthcare policy.
Article Title: Emerging Leader in Geriatric Emergency Medicine Dr. Cameron J. Gettel Earns Prestigious 2026 Jeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Award.
News Publication Date: March 31, 2026.
Web References:
AGS 2026 Virtual Annual Scientific Meeting: https://meeting.americangeriatrics.org/
Health in Aging Foundation: https://www.healthinaging.org/
Keywords: geriatric emergency medicine, care transitions, patient-reported outcomes, cognitive impairment, health disparities, digital health interventions, healthcare policy, aging, emergency department, CMS Hospital Star Ratings, MIPS Value Pathway, Yale School of Medicine.
Tags: aging population acute careAmerican Geriatrics Society awardscare transitions for older adultscaregiver perspectives in geriatricsDr. Cameron J. Gettel researchemergency care longitudinal outcomesemergency department care for elderlygeriatric emergency care innovationgeriatric patient-reported outcome measuresgeriatrics emergency medicineJeffrey H. Silverstein Memorial Awardpersonalized emergency care geriatrics



