Project Summary for the RCMAR CHIME Research Education Component Building on a highly successful 20-year track record of developing scientists who conduct minority aging research, the Research Education Component (REC) aims to develop faculty by supporting our theme of “Developing, Adapting, and Evaluating Interventions to Improve the Health of Racial/Ethnic Minority Elders”, which incorporates two RFA research objectives: i) identify and develop solutions to eliminate health disparities and health inequities in the growing population of older adults, and ii) improve the health and well-being of older adults. The REC Specific Aims are to: 1) Identify, recruit, and encourage URM faculty with demonstrated research potential and interest in minority aging research to apply as RCMAR scientists, 2) Select, with input from External Advisors, at least 3 outstanding scientists to receive 1-year pilot studies (up to $55,000 each inclusive of UCLA CTSI funds), 3) Provide intensive individual mentorship, an educational plan and a broad array of resources to enable scientists to complete, present, and publish their research and ultimately obtain independent funding, and 4) Monitor the progress of the scientists using a program of progress reports, mentorship committee meetings, and brief monthly progress review by the CHIME Executive Committee (EC). For this application, the REC has identified 3 RCMAR scientists to lead pilot projects: 1) Utibe Essien, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, at UCLA (as of Jan 2023) will work with mentor Dr. Mangione to examine i) whether race and ethnicity are associated with frailty in Veterans with incident Atrial Fibrillation (AF); ii) whether the presence frailty influences known racial and ethnic inequities in the use of anticoagulation for Veterans with incident AF; iii) whether frailty is a determinant of switching from warfarin to direct oral anticoagulant therapy for anticoagulation. 2) Chioun Lee, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medical Sociology at UC Riverside, will work with Drs. Link and Brown, to examine the progression of multimorbidity after age 50 and to quantify the mechanisms through which health disparities at the intersection of race/ethnicity and sex are created, using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS,1992–2020). 3) David Lee, MBA, MD, Clinical Instructor, Division of Geriatrics at UCLA, will work with Drs. Lo and Hays using Kaiser Permanente Northern California data to study the association of dementia and hip fracture and to understand differences by race and ethnicity, particularly among Asian American and Pacific Islander subgroups. The 3 proposed pilots address socioeconomic, health care, cultural, social, and psychological factors and physiological indicators across four levels of analysis (environmental, sociocultural, behavioral, and biological) of the NIA Health Disparities Research Framework (See Figure 1 in Overall), along with class...