Week 11-How to age successfully Flashcards

1
Q

What is meant by “Growing older takes a lifetime to complete”?

A

■ Development extends across the entire lifespan (you can get more meaningful definitions looking at this holistically rather than breaking down life into stages)
– Adult development is about the ageing process

■ Ageing often about decline, or biological ageing (e.g., elasticity=face wrinkles, grip strength and muscle mass decreases i.e., all biological markers of ageing)

■ Classifications tend to be based on biological and functional (activities of daily living e.g., medication, chores etc.,) age
– e.g. ‘Young-old’ ‘Oldest-old’
– ‘Third age’ (more independent, active 30-60s+) ‘Fourth age’ (more dependent on others)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What is meant by “You’re as old as you feel”?

A

■ We all experience ageing differently

■ Subjective age
– Many people feel older or younger than their chronological age (under 25 feel older, over 30 feel younger). (Subjective age can be a better indicator of health and longevity).

■ Psychological ageing
– Adaptation to the multidimensional nature of ageing (cognitive skills, motor) i.e., those who feel younger have better adaptations as said above.
– Complex process

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What is Gerontology? The bigger picture of ageing

A

-Psychologists, Sociologists, Biologists chip into this

-The focus on the process of growing older and focuses on the individual and collective processes to improve our understanding on older adults

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

What are the Early academic definitions of successful ageing?

A

■ Early origins in 1950s with research on functional age (i.e., looking at daily activities and level of support needed).

■ A focus on subgroups of older people who have aged ‘successfully’ i.e. with minimal functional limitations (i.e., people who can get up the stairs easily, good cognitive function etc.,).

■ Older adults grouped into dichotomous categories
– Impaired (had poor memory, cognition, functionality etc.,) vs. normal ageing (ageing as expected).

-Dichotomising people into 2 categories misses the nuance and subtle differences between people which will tell us what we need.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

What is the problem with this Early Academic View?

A

■ Doesn’t reflect the heterogeneity in ageing experience (i.e., the individual differences).

■ May limit research into the most psychologically and physically healthy groups (because you’re lumping them together).

-Doesn’t reflect psychological age and gains + losses

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

What are some Biomedical theories on successful ageing?

A

■ Tend to focus on optimisation of life expectancy and emphasise absence of disease.

■ Distinguish between usual and successful ageing
– ‘Usual’ ageing - normal decline in physical, social and cognitive functioning.
– ‘Successful’ ageing – functional losses minimised.

■ Rowe & Kahn’s (1998) model is one of the most well known and widely published biomedical examples.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What is Rowe & Kahn’s model (1998)?

A

Based on their MacArthur Research Network studies:
– Longitudinal cohort study (group of people with questions and tests repeated over multiple courses of their lifespan), across three community-based sites.

– Older adults (aged 70-79 in 1988) living in the US looking at biological and functioning levels.

– Divided into high, medium, and low-functioning subgroups based on the test results.

Components of Successful ageing:
1. Absence or avoidance of disease and risk factors for disease (e.g., may not be smoking)

  1. Maintenance of physical and cognitive functioning
  2. Active engagment with life

-High-functioning groups had all 3

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What are some Criticisms of Rowe & Kahn’s
model?

A

■ Underestimates a complex concept (ageing successfully means different things for different people).

■ Disease-free older age is unrealistic for most people (those who have recovered from injuries show successful ageing yet this model would disagree).

■ Doesn’t really acknowledge capacity for ongoing change and development (doesn’t address our want and need to learn and find purpose in life),

■ Academic vs. lay (non-academic) perceptions (Strawbridge et al., 2002)
– “A definition of successful ageing needs to include elements that matter to elderly people” (Bowling & Dieppe, 2005, p.1548)

-Derogatory for those who have a disability and the ability to adapt to that is a testament to their success (quite rude this model just excludes and doesn’t acknowledge that: shows a one fits all model for successful ageing)

-Is very biologically oriented and contains some social factors but doesn’t really include the psychological factors e.g., coping methods, resilience etc.,

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

What did Hung, Kempen & De Vries
(2010) find on lay definitions for successful ageing?

A

■ Reviewed over 30 peer-reviewed studies
– Revealed significant differences in what was valued between academics and lay groups.
– And, differences across cultures.
-Used healthy ageing rather than successful ageing

■ For ‘real people’, it’s about more than just longevity and the absence of disease or disability (their results were more diverse, broader and holistic meaning it overlapped).
-12 key domains for successful ageing

-The main takeaway is that ageing successfully is the life in your years rather than the years in your life.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What did Reichstad et al. (2008, 2010) find on lay definitions for successful ageing?

A

■ Wanted to focus on individuals’ experiences of ageing and navigating age-related challenges.

■ Instead of researcher-defined questions, asked older people (64-96 years) to talk about ageing, and ‘successful’ ageing.

■ Focus groups and one-to-one interviews revealed two key themes:
1. Self-knowledge (who you are, your personal identity, where you fit in the group)
2. Continuing growth (on growing capacity for learning and change)

■ Successful ageing viewed as an ongoing developmental process (rather than an outcome).

-Older people also acknowledged their losses and adapted to them e.g., forgetting to take medication so put sticky notes everywhere.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

What did Bowling & Dieppe (2005) find on lay definitions for successful ageing?

A

■ Physical appearance

■ Productivity and contribution to life (e.g., volunteering)

■ Accomplishments

■ Enjoyment of diet

■ Financial security

■ Neighbourhood

■ Sense of humour

■ Sense of purpose

■ Spirituality (different from religion)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Why should we shift successful ageing to a sociopsychological perspective?

A

■ Multidimensional approach, including a combination of objective and subjective factors, recognising different perspectives.

Life expectancy, mental and physical health, as well as:
– Life satisfaction and wellbeing (includes happiness and contentment)

– Personal growth, learning new things

– Psychological characteristics and resources, including perceived autonomy, control, independence, adaptability, coping, self-esteem, positive outlook, goals, sense of self

– Integration and participation in social, community, leisure activities

– Social networks and support

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Why is it worth thinking about successful ageing?

A

■ Demographic trends
– Substantial increases in life expectancy
– Growing proportion of people aged 65 or older, locally and globally

■ Important for helping to improve the quality of life as people age

■ May also address escalating health and social care costs

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What is the Importance of a lifespan perspective?

A

■ Ageing is a lifelong process
– Many of the factors that influence health in later life act across the lifecourse (these factors build up over our lives -understanding these can help us improve and maximise health and wellbeing).

■ By changing our lifestyles in early- and mid-life, we can influence the way that we age
–Early life interventions can have long lasting effects (e.g., quitting smoking)

■ Evidence it’s never too late to take action to promote good health in later life

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What can we learn from Lifecourse studies?

A

■ Longitudinal studies that follow groups of people through their lives to see how they change over time.

■ Examine micro and macro level factors that influence health (e.g. intrapersonal and social networks, living conditions, environment, social and economic policies).

■ Show life stages when we may be particularly susceptible to the effects of age-influencing factors related to lifestyle or environment.
– e.g. Adolescence is a sensitive period for bone development

■ Can inform when, as well as how to intervene, to influence ageing.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

What is the English Longitudinal Study for
Ageing? (aka ELSA)

A

■ Follows people of different ages from mid-adulthood into old age (interviewed every 2 years and measured on aspects such as cognition, mental wellbeing etc.,).

Many useful insights into what facilitates health ageing:
– e.g. Sustained physical activity in older age (e.g., taking the stairs rather than a lift, or joining a walking group etc.,) is associated with improved overall health (Hamer, Lavoie & Bacon, 2014).
– Lower levels of social engagement related to poorer health, impaired cognitive function, and higher loneliness (ELSA report).

17
Q

What is the Healthy Ageing across the Life
Course study (HALCyon)?

A

■ Aimed to examine healthy ageing across the life course.

– Highlights importance of life stories (i.e., taking this across the lifespan approach).

– Offers guidance on ‘lifestyle makeovers’ – keeping physically active, being in others’ company, eating healthily, avoiding risky health behaviours e.g. smoking, staying socially engaged.

18
Q

What is Vaillant’s Harvard Grant Study?

A

World’s longest continuous study of ageing and health:
– Followed two socially diverse groups of Harvard men, from college years (in 1930s/40s) through to later life

-“Successful aging means giving to others joyously whenever one is able, receiving from others gratefully whenever one needs it, and being greedy enough to develop one’s own self in between.”

-“Being old, healthy, and without friends is no fun”

-“Don’t try to think less of yourself, but try to think of yourself less.

-Factors such as altruism (generosity), creativity are controllable and had far more of an impact on where someone sat on this continuum rather than the non-controllable factors such as socioeconomic status.

19
Q

How can we successfully age as a dynamic adaptation process?

A

■ Resilience as a resource (i.e., something that we can learn, develop and apply to our life) (e.g. Jeste et al., 2013)
– A person’s ability to bounce back from the variety of challenges that can arise in life

■ Age-related changes in emotional processing
– Positive psychology movement - benefits of learnt optimism
– Carstensen’s Socioemotional Selectivity Theory
– Baltes and Baltes’ Selective Optimisation with Compensation
– Spirituality (e.g. Sadler & Biggs, 2006; Wong, 1998)

20
Q

What is Carstensen’s Socioemotional Selectivity Theory?

A

■ Motivational goals in later life about promoting emotional wellbeing.

■ Evidence pointing to the importance of social networks to successful aging.
– Social networks, through the support they provide, contribute positively to emotional well-being across the lifespan.

■ With age, we become more motivated to reduce social network size and increase intimacy, to prioritise and maximise emotional meaningful relationships and support emotional wellbeing.

21
Q

What is Baltes & Baltes’ Selective
Optimisation with Compensation?

A

■ A strategy to reconcile the emotional and social aspects of aging
– Acknowledges the losses and gains typical in later life

■ Older adults efficiently allocate available resources to meet goals through a process of selection, optimisation, and compensation (i.e., choose what is important for them set some goals, and then try and maximise and achieve it).
– Less important goals sacrificed at the cost of maintaining or achieving more important goals
– Pursuing these selective goals in an optimised way
– If some of the goals cannot be achieved, older adults engage in compensatory activities to overcome barriers (e.g., social network, mobility aids if difficulties with walking or going up the stairs)

22
Q

What is Wong’s (1998) spiritual model of
ageing?

A

■ Importance of having existential and spiritual needs met for successful ageing

– increasingly importance of existential and transformative coping with increasing age

– Positive meaning and purpose not only add years to one’s life, but also add life to one’s years (i.e., quality > quantity)

23
Q

What are the wider implications of how we define successful ageing?

A

■ A shift in policy towards a successful ageing model (Loos & Ivan, 2018)

– Increase in positive media representations of older people, ageing and the ageing population

– Successful agers depicted as active, socially-engaged, healthy, independent

– Potential to counter negative old-age stereotypes of decline and dependency

24
Q

Should successful ageing be pitched as an individual responsibility?

A

■ What’s the issue with a policy focus on personal agency and responsibility?
– Individual blame for ‘bad ageing’&raquo_space; attributed to sub-optimal life choices

– ‘Unsuccessful’ agers depicted as unhealthy, unproductive, and a burden on society

– Risks further marginalising already stigmatised groups of older people

– Ignores role of macro level factors such as public policy