Health and Aging Essay
Health and Aging Essay
Health and Aging Essay
related to perception of health. - The older the individual, the more difficult
it is to recover from stress. - As an individual age, acute conditions decrease
in frequency while chronic conditions increase in frequency. 4/5 of adults over
65 have at least one chronic condition. - Older adults may have multiple
disorders and sensory deficits that may interact. Treatments may also interact.
- In contrast to younger age groups, the elderly are likely to suffer from
physical health problems that are multiple, chronic, and treatable but not
curable. Acute illness may be superimposed on these conditions.
Although there are factors that affect our health and the aging process
that are not in our control , In a World Health article , K. Warner Schaie(1989),
research director of the Andrus Gerontology Center at the University of Southern
California, cites three reasons for optimism about future old age: The control
of childhood disease, better education, and the fitness revolution.(p.2)
The control of childhood disease often eliminates problems that occur
later in life as a result of these diseases. Instead of going away, the minor
assaults suffered by the body from disease, abuse and neglect can have "sleeper"
effects. For example Chicken pox in a child can lead much later in life to the
itching diseases known as shingles. Vaccines and other medicine have eliminated
many of the childhood diseases. Schaie predicts that people who will become
old 30 or 40 years from now will not have childhood diseases. Most people who
are now old have had them all.
Better education is also a reason for prolonged and healthier lives.
Where a grade school education was typical for the older generation, more than
half of all Americans now 30 or 40 years old have completed at least high school,
and studies show that people with more education live longer. They get better
jobs, suffer less economical stress, and tend to be more engaged with life and
more receptive to new ideas.
Finally, the fitness revolution has changed our habits with respect to
diet and exercise and self-care. An article in Generations, Joyce Carrol
Oates (1993) states, " per capita consumption of tobacco has dropped twenty-six
percent over the past 15 years, and the drop is accelerating, promising a
decrease in lung cancer. " Life-style changes and improved treatment of
hypertension have already produced a dramatic national decrease in
strokes.(p.13)