The Center for Technology and Aging was established to advance the diffusion of technologies that help older adults lead healthier lives and maintain independence.
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The Center for Technology and Aging was established to advance the diffusion of technologies that help older adults lead healthier lives and maintain independence.
Posted at 09:56 PM in Tom | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
You young folks, if you're average, can expect to live 18.7 more years after celebrating your 65th birthday. That's a seven-year bonus when you compare the gain with folks who reached 65 in 1900.
Here's another positive note. The life expectancy for those who reach 85 is now 92.2 years for women and 91.1 years for men.
Sounds pretty good, but elders in Japan, Canada and France do even better. Maybe it's the sake, the wine, the cool climate.
Worldwide, about 506 million people had topped the 65-year mark as of mid-2008. By 2040, that number will hit 1.3 billion, according to "An Aging World: 2008" study developed by the National Institute on Aging and produced by the U.S. Census Bureau. The proportion of older people will double from 7 percent to 14 percent in that time frame.
"Aging is affecting every country in every part of the world," said Richard Suzman, Ph.D., director of the institute's Behavioral and Social Research Division. In a bit of understatement, he added, "Global aging is changing the social and economic nature of the planet and presenting difficult challenges. . . Within 10 years, for the first time in human history, there will be more people aged 65 and older than children under 5. . . "
The most rapid increases in the number of elders are in developing countries. The fastest growing portion of the total population is the people 80 and up. This segment will increase 233 percent by 2040. China and India have almost one-third of the 65-and-older population, the study determined.
One sidelight: 20 percent of the women in the U.S. in 2006 had no biologic children. "These data raise questions about the provision of care when this cohort reaches advanced ages," the report stated.
The U.S. Census Bureau notes that baby boomers (those born between 1946 and 1964) will start turning 65 next year. The 65-and-up U.S. population in 2040 is projected to be twice as large as in 2000, growing from 35 million to 71.5 million and representing nearly 20 percent of the total U.S. population.
Now if the bureau could just let Congress know about this development and its possible impact on Social Security, Medicare and a few other programs.
Posted at 04:17 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
More than 1.8 million older adults are treated annually in emergency departments for injuries from falls, 433,000 are admitted to hospitals and 16,000 die because of their injuries, according to the CDC. Every year, about a third of Americans 65 and older fall, and about a third of those who lose their footing require medical treatment.
Rocky Miller, a 60-year-old Plano resident has launched a business, Slip Doctors, that will treat floors with a chemical that he says will make them more resistant to slips, slides and falls.
After years of selling motorcycles, the 60-year-old Plano resident has launched a business, Slip Doctors, that will treat floors with a chemical that he says will make them more resistant to slips, slides and falls.
"Simply put, my partners and I sell friction," he said. "In a country where the older population will double over the next 25 years, we think that's something that will be in demand for a long time."
The Addison-based business hopes to set itself apart from competitors, Miller said, by using a high-tech robot that scoots across the floor of a home or senior-living community and identifies slick spots.
Slip Doctors joins an industry springing up from people's concern over falling. Entrepreneurs and big corporations are creating products and services to stem a problem that threatens to worsen as boomers age.
"The good news is that we can reduce the risk of falling. It doesn't have to be an inevitable part of growing old," said Lynn Beattie, vice president of injury prevention at the National Council on Aging.
Aside from promoting longer lives and greater independence, the new efforts to prevent falls may help control health care costs as the oldest boomers qualify for Medicare in about a year, she said.
More than $19 billion is spent annually on treating seniors who fall. Without better prevention, that cost is projected to escalate to $43.8 billion a year by 2020, and Medicare will pay for most of it.
Posted at 12:37 PM in Tom | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The odds of your house burning down are pretty small. It happens to just .08 percent of U.S. citizens. Chances of being involved in an auto accident during your lifetime are .4 percent. The risk factor of being hospitalized for an illness or accident rises to 12 percent. The biggest bugaboo? Sixty percent of us will someday need assistance in our daily living.
As he jotted these statistics on a flip chart, Randy Watson, CLU, BCE, noted that most of us buy insurance for the house, the car, and the hospital, but we shy away from long-term-care insurance because of the cost.
“The average cost for daily living assistance is $70,000 a year,” said Watson, a trim, dark-haired man who started his lecture with the promise he wouldn’t try to sell us anything.
“So what can you do?” he asked.
Number One, the choice of most Americans, is to do nothing. A variant on that is to spend down until one becomes eligible for Medi-Cal. As a sidelight, Watson described a little-known Veterans Administration benefit under Title 38 of the United States code that provides an Aid and Attendance Pension up to $1,949 per month for veterans who qualify and need some type of human intervention.
Option Two, long-term-care insurance, is regarded as too expensive, but seniors should “price it out,” he said. Number Three is the “reserve parachute” of a reverse mortgage, a step that doesn’t suit everyone, and should be used as a last resort, he said.
Number Four is called asset-based long-term-care insurance, and involves the conversion of an asset, such as a CD, into long-term-care coverage worth a much larger amount with possible tax advantages. “You still have control of your investment, and you’re covered whether you need assistance at home or in a nursing home,” he said.
Watson said his father, who worked in the financial services industry for 40 years, taught him, “Never spend more than you make,” an aphorism that the U.S. forgot, and he offered figures to prove it. He also suggested shifting a conventional IRA to a multi-generation IRA. When you die, the children would be prevented from accidentally receiving a lump-sum, and thus avoid paying taxes on the total amount at a much higher rate.
“Either you give it to the government or you give it to your kids,” said Watson who has earned the designation of charter life underwriter and is a board certified estate planner. Additionally, Watson serves on the board of advisors for the Institute of Business and Finance.
For more information, contact him at [email protected] or phone 866-973-1088.
Posted at 09:30 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Here’s one of the quizzes that reveal, if you’re an average belle or bloke, how long you will remain in your living, breathing form. The total is based on the assumption you’ll avoid being hit by a truck or a meteorite.
Start with the number 72.
Personal facts:
If you’re a male, subtract 3. If female, add 4.
If you live in an urban area with more than 2 million people, subtract 2.
If you live in a town under 10,000 or on a farm, add 2.
If any grandparent lived to 85, add 2.
If all four grandparents lived to 80, add 6.
If either parent died of a stroke or heart attack before 50, subtract 4.
If any parent or sibling under 50 had cancer, a heart condition, or has had diabetes since childhood, subtract 3.
If you earn more than $75,000 a year, subtract 2.
If you finished college, add 1. If you have an advanced degree, add 2.
If you are over 65 and still working, add 3.
If you live with a spouse or friend, add 5. If not, subtract 1 for each decade alone since age 25.
Lifestyle status:
If you work behind a desk, subtract 3. If your work requires physical labor, add 3.
If you exercise strenuously five times a week for at least 30 minutes, add 4. If two or three times a week, add 2.
If you sleep more than ten hours per night, subtract 4.
Are you tense, aggressive, easily angered? Subtract 2.
Are you happy? Add 1. Unhappy? Subtract 2.
Have you had a speeding ticket in the last year? Subtract 1.
Smoke more than two packs a day? Subtract 8. One to two packs? Subtract 6. One half to one? Subtract 3.
Do you drink the equivalent of 1½ oz. of liquor a day? Subtract 1.
Overweight by 50 or more lbs.? Subtract 8; 30-50 lbs.? Subtract 4; 10-30 lbs.? Subtract 2.
A man over 50 who gets annual check-ups? Add 2.
A woman who sees a gynecologist yearly? Add 2
Age adjustment:
If you are between 30 and 40, add 2. Between 40 and 50, add 3. Between 50 and 70, add 4. Over 70, add 5.
Posted at 03:58 PM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Following on from Ted's post... although I believe I would greatly enjoy sleeping between two virgins, there is a lot of work going on regarding life extension. If I were in reasonably good health, I do believe I would be pleased to keep on truckin' as long as I could.
Posted at 10:25 PM in Tom | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
For about 3,660 years, give or take a decade or two, sporadic attempts of prolonging life have taken place. For virtually all of those years, it’s been a case of males who have been attempting to stretch their years, along with some other things.
Somewhere between 1600 to 1800 B.C., presumably on the advice of their physicians, older Egyptian fellows began dining on the internal organs of young animals, hoping this would renew their aging parts. In India, the Hindu physician Sushruta concocted more than 700 meds, include soma, a mind-altering plant that perked up older brains, or at least helped the fellows accept their faltering thinking ability.
The Chinese developed a potent elixir with tiny pieces of gold in it. Around the first century B.C, they believed everlasting life would be gained by using gold utensils. The gold had to be transmuted from mercury, which, unfortunately, poisoned the patient.
In the 1400s, injections came into vogue. Men who could afford it opted for blood. Pope Innocent VIII, interested in living longer, lined up transfusions from younger fellows. Unfortunately, one or more of them had the wrong blood type, and the pope died within a few hours of the injections.
Greeks and Romans believed the breath of virgins would invigorate older guys. Then a Dutch physician topped them with his tonic in the eighteenth century. Dr. Hermann Boerhaave prescribed that an older man should sleep between two virgins to regain his vigor and prowess. Makes you wonder about the scope of pharmacy services in those days.
Serge Voronoff put a new twist on the practice of injecting testicle extract into older men. The Russian surgeon began grafting the testicles of monkeys on the men. Some grafts failed because of immunologic rejection. Another problem: many of the monkeys had syphilis. Despite these drawbacks, other practitioners adopted the grafts technique throughout the 1920s and ‘30s until people finally wised up.
Maybe it’s time for research on why women outlive men.
Posted at 09:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Wow. I'm doing a bit of work for a new client on healthcare devices and stumbled across some information that really surprises me. There are similarities between Alzheimer's disease and what happens in a failing pancreas that produces diabetes.
Equally surprising, there seems to be a link between the two--people with diabetes seem to be more likely to develop Alzheimers. This story from the July 16 issue of the New York Times seems to sum up the story:
"Several new studies suggest that diabetes increases the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, adding to a store of evidence that links the disorders. The studies involve only Type 2 diabetes, the most common kind, which is usually related to obesity.
The connection raises an ominous prospect: that increases in diabetes, a major concern in the United States and worldwide, may worsen the rising toll from Alzheimer’s. The findings also add dementia to the cloud of threats that already hang over people with diabetes, including heart disease, strokes, kidney failure, blindness and amputations.
But some of the studies also hint that measures to prevent or control diabetes may lower the dementia risk, and that certain diabetes drugs should be tested to find whether they can help Alzheimer’s patients, even those without diabetes. Current treatments for Alzheimer’s can provide only a modest improvement in symptoms and cannot stop the progression of the disease."
For me, despite all the talk, money and attention devoted to cancer and to Alzheimers, diabetes has always seemed to be the 'disease of our age.' Especially Type II diabetes. Diabetes is a reflection of our lifestyle--and no, I'm not talking about lazy diet choices and watching too much TV, although they are certainly factors. What I mean is that our work has become sedentary, our transportation has become sedentary, our hobbies have become sedentary, and our diet is still based on what humans needed to maintain body weight when they consumed 4-6,000 calories a day. We now burn fractionally more calories than someone in a coma...
More from the Times article: "Alzheimer’s affects 1 in 10 people over age 65, and nearly half of people over 85. About 4.5 million Americans have it, and taking care of them costs $100 billion a year, according to the association. The number of patients is expected to grow, possibly reaching 11.3 million to 16 million by 2050, the association said.
But those projections do not include a possible increase from diabetes.
“Alzheimer’s is going to swamp the health care system,” said Dr. John C. Morris, a neurology professor at Washington University in St. Louis and an adviser to the Alzheimer’s Association.
Not everyone with diabetes gets Alzheimer’s, and not all Alzheimer’s patients are diabetic. But in the past decade, several large studies have found that compared with healthy people of the same age and sex, those with Type 2 diabetes are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s. The reason is not known, but researchers initially suspected that cardiovascular problems caused by diabetes might contribute to dementia by blocking blood flow to the brain or causing strokes.
More recently, though, scientists have begun to think that the diseases are connected in other ways as well. In both, destructive deposits of amyloid, a type of protein, build up: in the brain in Alzheimer’s, in the pancreas in Type 2 diabetes.
People with Type 2 often have a condition called insulin resistance, in which their cells cannot properly use insulin, the hormone needed to help glucose leave the blood and enter cells that need it. To compensate, the pancreas makes extra insulin, which can reach high levels in the blood. Too much insulin may lead to inflammation, which can contribute to damage in the brain."
The good news is, that since diet and exercise can help ward off Type II diabetes, it also can help prevent dementia.
So get on out there.
Posted at 09:37 AM in Tom | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
It seems every organization, company and nonprofit group is conducting studies on the factors that contribute to healthy aging. So I launched a scheme that had been percolating for some time.
The first step: the filing of a fictitious business name—Radishiology International. Next, at senior centers I placed “help wanted” notices on bulletin boards and rounded up enough people for three separate studies. The first one I called the control group. The participants simply kept track of what they ate for six months. Group 2 received six radishes per day that were included in one or meals a day. Group 3 members also got six radishes per day along with the explanation that they were part of an important study that would determine how much radishes improved their health, sex life, and looks.
Group 3 reported amazing progress in all three categories, enough to rate an 83 percent improvement on my progress scale. Group 2 scored a 49 percent gain in their energy levels. Even Group 1 showed slight weight losses and improved sleeping patterns, for an overall 17 percent advance.
The participants were unaware of the Friedelbern Factor, the finding that people engaged in research studies invariably get their act together and produce more, lose more, or make love more often, depending on the study emphasis. It’s like the placebo effect.
Before the study period, I had purchased every available radish seed and invested heavily in radish futures. By month four of the study, my radish cartel was in place. You’ve probably read or heard about the profits made by growers and dealers of blueberries, broccoli, tomatoes, and apples after testing proved their efficacy.
Things started popping after I announced the study results. I hired all of the study participants to help process orders. A veritable Niagara of cash flowed in.
Then came Bilbous Squelch. “I’m from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Radish Division, and I’m here to help,” he said as he parked his hand truck with three large boxes by my desk. The top box contained 978 pages of single-spaced instructions on interstate, intrastate and overseas shipment regulations. The middle box had 1,539 pages detailing the health and safety aspects of growing and shipping radishes. The third box had 1,752 pages that required information to be sent to 71 other government agencies.
It took less than six minutes to see that, like crime, a cartel doesn’t pay. I did recoup some money from the venture, and it’s doing fairly well since I invested in two of the leading paper supply companies.
Posted at 02:54 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Uncle Howard, with wife in tow, rode the subway for a family get-together at the home of Dr. Gene Cohen. When they surfaced, the New York City streets were white with snow, and catching a taxi proved impossible.
Uncle Howard, a man in his seventies, pondered a bit, then suddenly said, “Let’s cross the street.” He’d spotted a pizza establishment. Moments later he’d ordered one big pizza after learning the store delivered, then asked, “Can you deliver us with it?” An amused manager agreed, and the sojourners were soon visiting with family members.
Dr. Cohen includes this and many other anecdotes in The Creative Age: Awakening Human Potential in the Second Half of Life. As Betty Friedan points out in a back-cover blurb: So much research has been done on decline and terminal illness and all the negative aspects of aging, and so little is known about what really happens with the [creative] process in healthy people.”
He notes that advances in public health, nutrition, medical technology and science have expanded opportunities for older people to express themselves and fulfill their creative needs. People like Einstein and Edison represent creativity with a big “C” while individuals who make a meal a bit differently, design a backyard garden, or write a poem have achieved small “c” creativity that enhances life and produces satisfaction.
“Even in the best of circumstances, creativity is an evolving process; it ebbs and flows, and moves us in different ways at different times,” Dr. Cohen says. His studies and contacts with elders convinced him “that it is never too late, even in the face of obstacles, to enjoy a fuller experience of our human potential.”
He also describes the qualities that can enhance our creativity include self-motivation; stick-to-it-iveness; resourcefulness; independence; curiosity; attraction to the unknown; a sense of challenge; tolerance of ambiguity; ability to “step outside the lines”; desire to seek something different; courage to imagine things that aren’t; and the willingness to take risks, to dream, and to draw inspiration from within oneself.
The book’s publisher is Avon Books, Inc.
Posted at 04:31 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)