Mayor announces UofL Compassionate Cities Index

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    Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer, joined by representatives of the University of Louisville and local and international compassion organizations, today (Dec. 6) announced a new Compassionate Cities Index.

    The index, a research project from UofL’s Institute for Sustainable Health & Optimal Aging, in partnership with Louisville Metro Government, the University of Louisville School of Medicine, the International Center for Compassionate Cities, Compassionate Louisville and the International Charter for Compassion, is a comprehensive study designed to measure compassion at the city level within the context of individual communities.

    Fischer and the Louisville Metro Council formally committed to the international Charter for Compassion in 2011, and today, for the fifth year in a row, was named a Model City for Compassion by the Charter of Compassion.

    Louisville was honored for its focus on compassion and for programs such as the Mayor’s Give A Day Week of Service, and the success of Compassionate Louisville, a grassroots network of organizations that have adopted the Compassion Resolution.

    “Compassion is one of our three city pillars, reflecting our commitment to ensuring that all in our city have the opportunity and resources necessary to reach their full human potential,” Fischer said. “We are honored to be named a model for that work, and we’re excited about this new tool for measuring that work.”

    The Compassionate Cities Index carries this work further by defining and measuring the components that make cities compassionate. Drs. Joe D’Ambrosio and Anna Faul, both with the Institute of Sustainable Health & Optimal Aging, plan a comprehensive study that looks beyond dollars donated and hours volunteered, to measure how people feel and act with compassion within the context of their specific community.

    “This study is unique because we are capturing both subjective and objective measures that indicate compassion,” said Faul, who is executive director of the institute. Data will be gathered from the 37 standard ZIP codes in Jefferson County, with the goal of 67 survey responses per ZIP code.

    D’Ambrosio, director of health innovation and sustainability for the institute, explained the goals of the research: “This will allow us to understand how people practice compassion within the context of their neighborhood and examine how the city as a whole is promoting a culture of compassion.”

    “The Compassionate Cities Index answers the call from cities around the world for an adaptable tool that measures their definition of compassion. It is an honor for Louisville to be the first location to implement the Index,” said Corinne Witzel of the International Center for Compassionate Cities.

    “There is a strong correlation between individual health and the quality of life for a community’s citizens as they grow older. Compassion is a key component of both quality of health and quality of life. This index will provide valuable guideposts for improving wellbeing for all of us at every stage of our lives,” said Toni Ganzel, M.D., M.B.A., dean of the UofL School of Medicine.

    Participants in the study must be over the age of 18 residing in Jefferson County. Participants can complete the survey online at http://www.optimalaginginstitute.org/meaure-compassion or contact the institute at (502) 852-5228 to receive a paper survey to complete.

    Study volunteers also are needed to participate in a 30-minute semi-structured interview. If you are interested in being interviewed, please contact Lauren Humpert, study coordinator, at (502)852-5228 or lauren.humpert@louisville.edu.

    About the Institute for Sustainable Health & Optimal Aging

    The Institute for Sustainable Health & Optimal Aging is a 501(c)3 non-profit affiliated with the University of Louisville. The institute applies a transdisciplinary focus connecting stakeholders in the aging services community to support optimal aging. As a proactive generator and comprehensive repository of knowledge in best practices, we enable our partners to approach aging as an ordinary part of life, not a disease. For more information, please visit http://www.optimalaginginstitute.org/

    About the Charter for Compassion

    Charter for Compassion International provides an umbrella for people to engage in collaborative partnerships worldwide. The charter’s mission is to bring to life the principles articulated in the Charter for Compassion through concrete, practical action in a myriad of sectors. To learn more, visit http://www.charterforcompassion.org/

    About the International Center for Compassionate Cities

    The International Center for Compassionate Cities (ICCC) is a project being developed in Louisville under a mission to unite and serve cities that are working to advance the tenants of the Charter for Compassion. The ICCC will be a central location for cities to share, view and utilize compassion-focused metrics, tools, information and learning opportunities developed by the ICCC and gathered from existing work in cities around the world. For more information please contact Corinne Witzel at yourcompassionatecity@gmail.com.

     

     

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    Jill Scoggins is Director of Communications at UofL's Louis D. Brandeis School of Law. She has been at UofL since 2010.