As many readers will know, during the last several months I’ve worked under the auspices of the Fulbright Scholar program, serving as the 2024-25 Visiting Research Fellow at University of Ottawa’s Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics.  In that role, I had an opportunity to consider carefully issues at the intersection of aging, health practices, legal regulations, government policy and ethics.  High on this list of overlapping concerns is the need for solutions to Alzheimer’s Disease.

The development of treatments for Alzheimer’s Disease requires bold thinking and, as I have learned, lots of data capture in order to craft safeguards and monitor results accurately.  Dr. Andrew Frank, a cognitive neurologist at Bruyere Health Research Institute in Ottawa, shared hours of his time with me, walking me through how he approaches consideration of potential therapies in his cognitive neurological clinic.

This spring, I also taught an elder law module at Penn State Dickinson Law where my law students explored patient’s wishes, as well as risks, benefits and safeguards for Alzheimer’s medications, with awareness of serious mishandling of some key data in the past.  With careful consideration of risks and after weighing the importance of treatment for the disease, I recently joined Dr. Frank in writing to urge Canada as a nation to move forward  on development of medications.  On Thursday, our joint Op-Ed essay appeared in the Montreal Gazette.

Montreal Gazette OpEd  Andrew Frank and Katherine C. Pearson 6.27.2025

You may be able to read the full article (there is a paywall triggered by multiple access attempts) on the Montreal Gazette here.  We welcome your comments online.  My special thanks go to Professor of Law Vanessa Gruben at University of Ottawa and Dr. Kumanan Wilson at Bruyere, who offered important encouragement for our collaborative work.  

Photo of Katherine C. Pearson Katherine C. Pearson

Katherine C. Pearson is a Professor of Law and the Arthur L. and Sandra S. Piccone Faculty Scholar at Penn State Dickinson Law in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Her scholarship focuses on laws and policies connected to aging and she has frequently included age-related issues…

Katherine C. Pearson is a Professor of Law and the Arthur L. and Sandra S. Piccone Faculty Scholar at Penn State Dickinson Law in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Her scholarship focuses on laws and policies connected to aging and she has frequently included age-related issues in her teaching of courses on contract law, conflicts of law and nonprofit organizations law.  She is a regular speaker for continuing education programs, both for consumers and lawyers, to address cutting edge concerns in consumer protection for older adults.  She is the author of articles and chapters on access to justice, senior living options including continuing care and life plan communities, long-term care financing and filial obligations, and is the co-author of a treatise, The Law of Financial Abuse and Exploitation (Bisel 2011).

She authored chapters for the Research Handbook on Law, Society and Ageing, published in 2024 as part of a series on law and society handbooks offered by international publisher Edward Elgar. She is a 2024-2025 Fulbright Scholar in Canada and was in residence at the University of Ottawa in the Fall of 2024 as the Research Chair in Health Law, Policy and Ethics.  Her earlier experience as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar (based at the Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland, and working in Ireland, Portugal, and the U.K. in 2009-10), resulted in publications, including an article with an international, historical perspective on ethical concerns for attorneys representing older adults, entitled “The Lesson of the Irish Family Pub,” published by Stetson Law Review.