WSA Honorary Board

WSA's Honorary Board members promote the agenda and activities of the Well Spouse Association and its members. 

Teena Cahill, Psy.D.

"Resilient," "passionate," "inspiring," and "fun" are words often used to characterize Teena Cahill, Psy.D., respected expert, educator, speaker, humorist, and author. Dr. Cahill brings a uniquely empowering perspective to topics of leadership, health & wellness, productivity, contribution, and success. Her insight and expertise stem from ideas based in evidence-based research in cognitive behavioral psychology, positive psychology, leadership and the new science of wellness, plus hands-on experience in all parts of life. A spousal caregiver and well spouse herself, Dr. Cahill is the author of The Cahill Factor: Turning Adversity into Advantage. More about her work is available at teenacahill.com. She was elected to WSA’s Honorary Board in 2011.

Barry J. Jacobs, Psy.D.

Barry Jacobs is a clinical psychologist, a family therapist and a member of AARP's Caregiving Advisory Panel. He is also a former magazine journalist. His passion for enhancing support for family caregivers led him to write or cowrite dozens of articles and several books on the subject, including The Emotional Survival Guide for Caregivers: Looking After Yourself and Your Family While Helping an Aging Parent, AARP Meditations for Caregivers: Practical, Emotional and Spiritual Support for You and Your Family, and Love and Meaning after 50. He served as caregiver for his mother and stepfather, both of whom had dementia. Jacobs has appeared as a caregiving expert on Dr. Phil and given more than 600 presentations for family caregivers, community groups, and medical and mental health professionals. His areas of expertise include behavioral health integration, complex care management, enhancing family caregiver engagement and supports, team-based care, and provider wellness. He was elected to WSA’s Honorary Board in 2011. 

Dr. Zachary White

Zachary White is a Professor of Communication who researches and writes about the caregiver experience. He received his Ph.D. in communication from Purdue University. His academic research and teaching focus on how people manage meaning and communicate their experiences amidst high levels of ambiguity.  He has published and presented academic research addressing health communication as encountered by medical providers, informal caregivers, family members, and organizational employees. He and Donna Thomson wrote The Unexpected Journey of Caring: The Transformation From Loved One to Caregiver. He teaches university courses at the graduate and undergraduate level addressing topics including provider-patient communication, health and illness narratives, digital health literacy, interpersonal communication and relationship development on and offline, online social support and disclosure, the management of health-related disclosures in the workplace, and sense making amidst life transitions. His work can be found at theunpreparedcaregiver.com. He was elected to WSA’s Honorary Board in 2016. 

Aaron Blight, Ed.D.

Aaron Blight is an international speaker and consultant on caregiving, aging, and healthcare. He is the Founder of Caregiving Kinetics and has been recognized as a “Top 100 Healthcare Leader” by the International Forum on Advancements in Healthcare. He attends caregiver support groups to facilitate discussions related to his book, When Caregiving Calls: Guidance as You Care for a Parent, Spouse, or Aging Relative. Aaron’s passion for supporting caregivers is rooted in his personal experience as a family caregiver; his professional work as the owner of a large home care company and as a leader at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; and his study of caregiving as a phenomenon of social science. Aaron serves as an Adjunct Professor at Shenandoah University and an advisory board member of the Shenandoah Area Agency on Aging. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University, a master’s degree from the University of Baltimore, and a doctorate degree from The George Washington University. Aaron was elected to WSA's Honorary Board in 2020.

Barbara Kivowitz, MSW

Barbara Kivowitz, MSW is a clinician and consultant specializing in relationship-centered health care. In her consulting practice she works with health care organizations to help them develop their innovation and collaboration capabilities and to deliver more patient- and family-focused care. She developed programs for Stanford Health Care and Stanford Medical School to teach clinicians strategies for supporting the patient/caregiver relationship. She has also spoken on this topic to patients/caregivers and to professional groups at Massachusetts General Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center, and to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. She also worked with Vermont on the implementation of their statewide, health reform initiative, and helped a large health care system learn to use technology to work more collaboratively. She was on the Board of Trustees of Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates and is on the Board of Overseers of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. In her prior career she was a clinical psychotherapist in both community and hospital settings, working with many couples and families dealing with difficult issues, including illness, and she consulted to a hospice program. She has also authored articles on couples and illness for popular and clinical publications and has a widely read blog on this topic.  She holds graduate degrees from Simmons College and Harvard University. She is the co-author of Love in the Time of Chronic Illness: How to Fight the Sickness, Not Each Other, a guide for patient-caregiver partners and for the clinicians who help them.  She has been both the ill partner and a caregiver in her relationship with her husband.