Skip to content
USI campus to reopen, classes resume, January 28

Change is never easy, and we know this is a challenging time as you navigate recent announcements affecting programs and operations at Oakland City University. We want you to know that your educational journey doesn’t have to pause.

At the University of Southern Indiana, we are fully committed to helping you transition seamlessly so you can stay on track with your education journey. We’ve designed this dedicated page specifically for you to explore our programs, access resources, learn about credit transfers and continue your education with minimal interruption.

>> OCU Student Information

Last updated:

The 2024-25 Bronstein Faculty Research and/or Innovation Award to Support Excellence in Dementia Care and/or Advance Care Planning Education will fund faculty research and creative work at USI during the 2024-25 academic year. USI faculty will be eligible to apply for a competitive Research and/or Innovation Award supporting excellence in dementia care and/or advance care planning. A total of $5,000 in funding will be available and allocated through the competitive review of proposals by a selection committee. Funding faculty research and innovation promotes growth and development for faculty in these two areas of excellence. As a grant requirement, faculty awarded will be required to share his/her project purpose and outcomes with students for three academic years. Click below to learn more and apply!

Apply Here

Current Bronstein Award Recipient


Urska Dobersek, Ph.D., CMPC

2023-2024

Dietary Patterns & Cognitive Functioning in Older Individuals*

In 2023, the World Health Organization reported that dementia is one of the major causes of disability and the seventh leading cause of death worldwide. Given that the incidence of dementia substantially increases after the age of 75, the expected growth in the elderly population is projected to triple in dementia cases by 2050. Given that dietary intake is considered a major contributor to mental and physical health, it is important to examine the diet-health relations among the elderly populations to inform both the public and clinical practice. However, the current evidence on diet-health relations among elderly populations showed equivocal findings. Because of the contradictory findings in extant literature, there is a need to further explore diet-health relations among the elderly populations from both positive and negative psychological perspectives. Thus, the findings of the proposed research will provide a wider explanation and understanding of diet-health and diet-disease relations among older individuals.

This will be a cross-sectional research study with a target sample size of 1,300 people. Dr. Dobersek will be utilizing Qualtrics panels because they offer a sample representative of the U.S. population. 

*Dr. Dobersek will begin presenting her research findings in 2025!

Past Bronstein Award Recipients


Junghee Han, MSW, PhD

2022-2023

Advanced Care Planning in Older Korean-American Adults

Literature has documented that compared to their racial and ethnic counterparts, older Korean-American adults are less likely to complete advance care planning and participate in the end-of-life decision-making processes regardless of the patient’s capacity for making decisions largely due to the culturally determined, expected roles for families in end-of-life decisions, as well as unclear guidelines for a health care proxy or a living will. Also, Koreans consider it disrespectful or insensitive to talk about end-of-life care issues with older adults. Understanding influencing factors that increase the completion of advanced care planning and end-of-life decision-making will be useful in developing culturally competent social work intervention strategies to aid older Korean Americans in making the right decisions for themselves in advance.

This will be an exploratory mixed-method study to identify potential factors affecting advance care planning and end-of-life care decisions among older Korean Americans in Tri-state areas, including Indiana, Tennessee, and Missouri. The 10-15 samples will be recruited using snowball and convenience sampling. The study will use non-random sampling because older Korean Americans are considered a hidden population in the area.