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Quality of life

Aging Health

January’s Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences reports on an aging phenomenon that is so familiar that we have turned it into a cliche:  “You are only as old as you feel.” According to research from Purdue University, the cliche represents a real truth about aging health. “How old you are matters, but beyond that it’s your interpretation that has far-reaching implications for the process of aging,” said Markus H. Schafer, a doctoral student in sociology and gerontology who led the study. “So, if you feel old beyond your own chronological years you are probably going to experience a lot of the downsides that we associate with aging.”But if you are older and maintain a sense of being younger, then that gives you an edge in maintaining a lot of the abilities you prize.”

The data for the study about aging were collected in 1995 and 2005 as part of the National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States.  About 500 people from ages 55-74 were surveyed.  In 1995, the participants were asked, “What age do you feel most of the time.”  On the average they described themselves as feeling  12 years younger than they actually were.  When the researchers interviewed them again in 2005 they concluded that the people who originally felt young for their age generally had more confidence about their mental abilities ten years later.  Even though chronological age was important subjective age actually had a stronger effect on aging health.

The researchers noted that the findings did not reveal which factor was the cause and which was the effect.  Do wellness and happiness improve cognitive abilities or does cognitive ability contribute to a feeling of wellness? According to the report, that question will be addressed by future research.  We will report it here when it is determined.

My primary objective in reviewing this study here is to reinforce a point I make frequently; our expectations and attitudes about aging have a major effect on our quality of life.  This effect begins quite early, generally as soon as we start thinking about getting older as a factor in our lives.  If we expect to live well, we tend to make plans that lead to living well.  If we expect to spend our senior years in the process of dying, we will make decisions that tend to minimize the opportunities to do otherwise.

If this “aging well” stuff was just “pie in the sky” I wouldn’t want any part in promoting it.  However, I can honestly say that I am pleasantly surprised at how much enjoyment I am getting out of these “post-retirement” years, and I planned very poorly for them.  As the old adage goes, “If I had known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of myself.”  However, I consider myself very fortunate, because I have been placed in a position to see and understand what the world, especially the world of communications and technology, have to offer.  I am writing this because I am aware that many of my peers, and especially my parents’ peers, are trapped in the depressing expectations of the past.  I urge you to join me in the campaign to open the world back up to senior citizens.

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Your memory: How it works and how to improve it

by Bob McCluskey on March 15, 2010

Research increasing tells us that more social engagement delays memory loss as we age.  This is not surprising because relating to other people exercises the memory at many levels.  As we learn more about how memory works we understand that past experiences are constantly being recalled and associated with current perceptions and thoughts.  When the resulting associations are themselves stored for future use, the memory is strengthened.

That is why strong social interaction with friends, family and community members can improve our brain health as we grow older.  It also reinforces the understanding that social isolation is a major risk factor for mental and emotional decline for seniors.  Recently the Harvard School of Public Health studied data from the Health And Retirement Study, that observed adults who were 50 years of age or more. The subjects of the study completed memory tests every two years. The researchers also measured the social activity of study participants based on marital status, volunteer activities and contact with parents, children and neighbors. The results showed that people in their 50s and 60s who engaged in a significant amount of social activity also had the slowest rate of memory loss. In fact, when they were compared to folks who were the least socially active, those who had the highest socialization scores had less than half the rate of memory loss.

Ironically, the increasing importance of social interaction occurs at a period of life when people are most vulnerable to isolation.  Declining health, diminishing traditional support systems, the increasing independence of younger children and relatives and negative expectations about aging combine to produce loneliness and depression, which lead to accelerating health decline, and so forth. This is not necessary.

People who are suffering from these symptoms of aging are the least capable of helping themselves break free of the cycles that are robbing them of the potential for a great quality of life.  It is critically important that those who care for and about them intervene, if necessary, to interrupt the cycles.  This is not always easy in a society that values independence and non-interference.  However, if we care about our aging population we must acknowledge that they are not as independent as they were, or as they think they are, or as they would like to be.  We need to find creative ways to help them maintain their socialization opportunities and, thus, their memories.  Technology is one such means, and community resources can offer many others.  Nevertheless, it is likely to be up to those of us who owe them so much to pay it back by gently nudging them back into society when we see them slipping away.

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