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'''Bold text'''Old people should all be euthanized because their GAY
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[[Image:Maes Old Woman Dozing.jpg|thumb|upright|''Old Woman Dozing'' by [[Nicolaes Maes]] (1656). [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium|Royal Museums of Fine Arts]], [[Brussels]]]]

'''Old age''' consists of ages nearing or surpassing the life expectancy of human beings, and thus the end of the human [[biological life cycle|life cycle]]. Euphemisms and terms for old people include, '''old people''' (worldwide usage), '''seniors''' (American usage), '''senior citizens''' (British and American usage), '''older adults''' (in the social sciences<ref>''Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th edition'' (American Psychological Association, 2009) ISBN 1433805618{{page needed|date=February 2015}}</ref>), '''the elderly''', and '''elders''' (in many cultures —including the cultures of aboriginal people).

Old people often have limited regenerative abilities and are more susceptible to disease, syndromes, and sickness than younger adults. The organic process of [[ageing]] is called [[senescence]],<ref>http://www.thefreedictionary.com/senescence</ref> the medical study of the aging process is [[gerontology]],<ref>http://www.thefreedictionary.com/gerontology{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref> and the study of diseases that afflict the elderly is [[geriatrics]].<ref>http://www.thefreedictionary.com/geriatrics{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref> The elderly also face other social issues such as [[retirement]], loneliness, and [[ageism]].<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-24572231{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref>

The chronological age denoted as "old age" varies culturally and historically. Thus, old age is "a social construct" rather than a definite "biological stage".<ref>''Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science & Medicine'', s.v. "old age". Online at http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198568506.001.0001/acref-9780198568506-e-4834?rskey=7F4W2c&result=4834. Accessed December 05, 2013.</ref>

==Definitions==
Definitions of old age include official definitions, popular definitions, sub-group definitions, and four dimensions as follows.

===Official definitions===
Old age comprises "the later part of life; the period of life after youth and middle age . . . , usually with reference to deterioration"<ref>"old age, n.". ''Oxford English Dictionary Online''. September 2013. Oxford University Press. http://0-www.oed.com.librarycatalog.vts.edu/view/Entry/258473?redirectedFrom=old+age& (accessed December 02, 2013).</ref>
When old age begins cannot be universally defined because it shifts according to the context. The United Nations has agreed that 60+ years may be usually denoted as old age,<ref>http://www.who.int/healthinfo/survey/ageingdefnolder/en/ (Accessed December 24, 2013.</ref> and this is the first attempt at an international definition of old age. However, for its study of old age in Africa, the World Health Organization (WHO) set 50 as the beginning of old age. At the same time, the WHO recognized that the developing world often defines old age, not by years, but by new roles, loss of previous roles, or inability to make active contribution to society.<ref>“Indicators for the Minimum Data Set Project on Ageing,” http://www.who.int/healthinfo/survey/ageing_mds_report_en_daressalaam.pdf.</ref>

Most developed Western countries set the age of 60 to 65 for retirement and old-age social programs eligibility. However, various countries and societies reckon the onset of old age as anywhere from the mid-40s to the 70s.<ref name="britannica.com">http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/426737/old-age</ref> Furthermore, the fact that life expectancy beyond 80 has become widespread has shifted definitions of old age.<ref>The Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center, “About Us.” http://www.mailman.columbia.edu/academic-departments/centers/columbia-aging/about-us.(accessed December 24, 2013.</ref>

===Popular definitions===
A Pew Research Center study of 2,929 Americans, age 18+, found that they hold very different definitions of old age. Respondents under 30 said that old age begins at 60, but respondents 65+ said 74.<ref>Pew Research Center, “Growing Old in America: Expectations vs. Reality,” http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/files/2010/10/Getting-Old-in-America.pdf</ref>

Most Britons define old age as starting at 59 according to a survey of 2,200 people in the UK. The under 25s reckon 54 as the beginning of old age. The 80+ define old age as starting at 68.<ref>“Old age starts at 54 (and youth ends at 32) - that's if you ask young people” at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2086030/Old-age-starts-54-youth-ends-32.html. Accessed 27 December 2013.</ref> Another survey concluded that most Britons define the onset of old age as almost 70. Europeans on average set the start of old age at 62.<ref>“Middle age begins at 55 years, survey suggests” at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19622330. Accessed December 27, 2013.</ref>

===Sub-group definitions===
Gerontologists have recognized the very different conditions that people experience as they grow older within the years defined as old age. In developed countries, most people in their 60s and early 70s are still fit, active, and able to care for themselves.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 607.</ref> However, after 75, they will become increasingly [[Frailty syndrome|frail]], a condition marked by serious mental and physical debilitation.<ref>“Frailty in Older Adults” at http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=204046. Accessed December 3, 2013.</ref>

Therefore, rather than lumping together all people who have been defined as old, some gerontologists have recognized the diversity of old age by defining sub-groups. One study distinguishes the young old (60 to 69), the middle old (70 to 79), and the very old (80+).<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=1727842|year=1992|author1=Forman|first1=D. E.|title=PTCA in the elderly: The "young-old" versus the "old-old"|journal=Journal of the American Geriatrics Society|volume=40|issue=1|pages=19–22|last2=Berman|first2=A. D.|last3=McCabe|first3=C. H.|last4=Baim|first4=D. S.|last5=Wei|first5=J. Y.}}</ref> Another study’s sub-grouping is young-old ( 65 to 74), middle-old (75–84), and oldest-old (85+).<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1093/gerona/gln045|title=Total Water Intakes of Community-Living Middle-Old and Oldest-Old Adults|journal=The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences|volume=64A|issue=4|pages=481|year=2009|last1=Zizza|first1=C. A.|last2=Ellison|first2=K. J.|last3=Wernette|first3=C. M.}}</ref> A third sub-grouping is “young old” (65-74), “old” (74-84), and "old-old" (85+).<ref>http://transgenerational.org/aging/demographics.htm{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref> Delineating sub-groups in the 65+ population enables a more accurate portrayal of significant life changes.<ref>Victor G. Cicirelli, ''Older Adults' Views on Death'' (Springer, 2002), 4.</ref>

===Four dimensions===
Old age comprises the four dimensions: chronological, biological, psychological, and social.<ref>Phillips, Judith, Kristine Ajrouch, and Sarah Hillcoat-Nallétamby, ''Key Concepts in Social Gerontology'' (SAGE Publications, 2010), 12-13.</ref> Chronological age may differ considerably from a person’s functional age. The distinguishing marks of old age normally occur in all five senses at different times and different rates for different persons.<ref>“When Does Someone Attain Old Age?” at http://ohioline.osu.edu/ss-fact/0101.html. Accessed November 20, 2013.</ref> In addition to chronological age, people can be considered old because of the other three dimensions of old age. For example, people may be considered old when they become grandparents or when they begin to do less or different work in retirement.<ref>"WHO"{{Cite web|url=http://www.who.int/healthinfo/survey/agei
ngdefnolder/en/|title=Definition of an older or elderly person}}</ref>

===Senior citizen===
{{cleanup merge|Senior citizen|date=November 2014}}

Senior citizen is a common [[euphemism]] for an old person used in [[American English]], and sometimes in [[British English]]. It implies or means that the person being referred to is retired.<ref>http://www.oup.com/oald-bin/web_getald7index1a.pl</ref><ref>http://www.bartleby.com/61/36/S0263600.html</ref><ref>http://www.chambersharrap.co.uk/chambers/features/chref/chref.py/main?query=senior+citizen&title=21st</ref><ref>http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=71747&dict=CALD</ref> This in turn usually implies or in fact means that the person is over the [[retirement age]], which varies according to country. Synonyms include '''old age pensioner''' or '''pensioner''' in British English, and '''retiree''' and '''senior''' in American English. Some dictionaries describe widespread usage of "senior citizen" for people over the age of 65.<ref>http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/senior-citizen</ref>

When defined in an official context, ''senior citizen'' is often used for legal or policy-related reasons in determining who is eligible for certain benefits available to the age group.

It is used in general usage instead of traditional terms such as ''old person'', ''old-age pensioner'', or ''elderly'' as a courtesy and to signify continuing relevance of and respect for this population group as "[[citizen]]s" of society, of ''senior'' rank.<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=xylg46v5fRUC&pg=PA64&lpg=PA64 Mental Health Concepts by Claire G. Waughfield, Teresa S. Burckhalter</ref>

The term was apparently coined in 1938 during a political campaign.<ref>http://www.theseniortimes.com/richler.htm The Senior Times</ref> It has come into widespread use in recent decades in legislation, commerce, and common speech. Especially in less formal contexts, it is often abbreviated as "senior(s)", which is also used as an [[adjective]].

In commerce, some businesses offer customers of a certain age a "[[senior discount]]". The age at which these discounts are available vary between 55, 60 or 65, and other criteria may also apply. Sometimes a special "[[senior discount card]]" or other proof of age needs to be obtained and produced to show entitlement.

====Age qualifications====

The age which qualifies for senior citizen status varies widely. In governmental contexts it is usually associated with an age at which [[pension]]s or medical benefits for the elderly become available. In commercial contexts, where it may serve as a [[marketing]] device to attract customers, the age is often significantly lower.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}}

In the [[United States]], the standard retirement age is currently 65 (gradually increasing to 67).{{citation needed|date=February 2015}}

In Canada, the OASP (Old Age Security Pension) is available at 65 (gradually increasing to 67, starting in the period 2023-2029),<ref>http://www.servicecanada.gc.ca/eng/isp/oas/changes/index.shtml</ref> and the CPP (Canada Pension Plan) as early as age 60.

The [[AARP]] allows couples in which one spouse has reached the age of 50 to join, regardless of the age of the other spouse.

==Marks of old age==
The distinguishing marks associated with old age comprise both physical and mental characteristics.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=1891555|year=1991|author1=Salokangas|first1=R. K.|title=Physical and mental health changes in retirement age|journal=Psychotherapy and psychosomatics|volume=55|issue=2–4|pages=100–7|last2=Joukamaa|first2=M}}</ref> The marks of old age are so unlike the marks of middle age that it has been suggested that, as an individual transitions into old age, he/she might well be thought of as different persons “time-sharing” the same identity.<ref>Richard A. Posner, ''Aging and Old Age'' (University of Chicago, 1997), 86-87.</ref>

These marks do not occur at the same chronological age for everyone. Also, they occur at different rates and order for different people.<ref>“When Does Someone Attain Old Age?” at http://ohioline.osu.edu/ss-fact/0101.html. Accessed November 20, 2013</ref> Because each person is unique, marks of old age vary between people, even those of the same chronological age.<ref>“Ageing: Myth and Reality” (The Department of Communities, Child Safety and Disability Services, Australia, 2012) 12-13 at http://www.communities.qld.gov.au/resources/communityservices/seniors/publications/ageing-myth-reality.pdf. Accessed November 18, 2013.</ref>

A basic mark of old age that affects both body and mind is “slowness of behavior.”<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1146/annurev.ps.46.020195.001553|pmid=7872732|title=Aging and Speed of Behavior: Possible Consequences for Psychological Functioning|journal=Annual Review of Psychology|volume=46|pages=329–53|year=1995|last1=Birren|first1=J E|last2=Fisher|first2=L M}}</ref> This “slowing down principle” finds a correlation between advancing age and slowness of reaction and task performance, both physical and mental.<ref>Donald H. Kausler and Barry C. Kausler, ''The Graying of America: An Encyclopedia of Aging, Health, Mind, and Behavior'' (University of Illinois, 2001), 376-377.</ref>

===Physical marks of old age===
Physical marks of old age include the following:

* '''Bone and joint.''' Old bones are marked by “thinning and shrinkage.” This results in a loss of height (about two inches by age 80), a stooping posture in many people, and a greater susceptibility to bone and joint diseases such as [[osteoarthritis]] and [[osteoporosis]].<ref name="wahsa.org">“The Normal Aging Process” at http://wahsa.org/agingprocess.pdf and http://www.documbase.com/The-Normal-Aging-Process.pdf. Accessed December 1, 2013.</ref>

* '''Chronic diseases.''' Most older persons have at least one [[Chronic (medicine)|chronic condition]] and many have multiple conditions. In 2007-2009, the most frequently occurring conditions among older persons in the United States were uncontrolled [[hypertension]] (34%), diagnosed arthritis (50%), and heart disease (32%).<ref>U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Administration on Aging, “A Profile of Older Americans: 2011," 13. Online at http://www.aoa.gov/Aging_Statistics/Profile/2011/docs/2011profile.pdf.</ref>

* '''Dental problems.''' Less [[saliva]] and less ability for [[oral hygiene]] in old age increases the chance of [[Dental caries|tooth decay and infection]].<ref>Rachelle Zukerman, “Helping Your Elder with Grooming and Hygiene,” at http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/helping-your-elder-with-grooming-and-hygiene.html. Accessed January 9, 2014.</ref>

* '''Digestive system.''' About 40% of the time, old age is marked by digestive disorders such as difficulty in swallowing, inability to eat enough and to absorb nutrition, constipation and bleeding.<ref>“Your Aging Digestive System,” www.JohnsHopkinsHealthAlerts.com. Accessed December 1, 2013.</ref>

* '''Eyesight.''' Diminished eyesight makes it more difficult to read in low lighting and in smaller print. Speed with which an individual reads and the ability to locate objects may also be impaired.<ref>American Psychological Association, “Older Adults' Health and Age-Related Changes” at http://www.apa.org/pi/aging/resources/guides/older.aspx</ref>

* '''Falls.''' Old age spells risk for injury from falls that might not cause injury to a younger person.<ref>[http://www.ncoa.org/improve-health/center-for-healthy-aging/falls-prevention/falls-prevention-awareness.html Center for Healthy Aging: Falls Prevention Awareness Day]</ref> Every year, about one-third of those 65 years old and over half of those 80 years old fall.<ref>“How Often Falls Occur” at http://www.learnnottofall.com/content/fall-facts/how-often.jsp. Accessed November 4, 2013.</ref> Falls are the leading cause of injury and death for old people.<ref>“Falls Among Older Adults: An Overview” at http://www.cdc.gov/homeandrecreationalsafety/Falls/adultfalls.html.</ref>

* '''Hair''' usually becomes thinner and grayer.<ref name="webmd.com">“Healthy Aging - Normal Aging” at http://www.webmd.com/healthy-aging/tc/healthy-aging-normal-aging. Accessed November 30, 2013.</ref>

* '''Hearing.''' By age 75 and older, 48% of men and 37% of women encounter impairments in hearing. Of the 26.7 million people over age 50 with a hearing impairment, only one in seven uses a hearing aid.<ref>American Psychological Association, “Older Adults' Health and Age-Related Changes” at http://www.apa.org/pi/aging/resources/guides/older.aspx. Accessed November 3, 2013</ref>

* '''Hearts''' are less efficient in old age with a resulting loss of stamina. In addition, atherosclerosis can constrict blood flow.<ref name="webmd.com"/>

* '''Immune function.''' Less efficient immune function ([[Immunosenescence]]) is a mark of old age.<ref>“The Immune System in the Elderly: A Fair Fight Against Diseases?” at http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/780507_2. Accessed November 8, 2013.</ref>

* '''Lungs''' expand less well; thus, they provide less oxygen.<ref name="wahsa.org"/>

* '''Pain''' afflicts old people at least 25% of the time, increasing with age up to 80% for those in nursing homes.<ref>S. A. King, “The challenge of geriatric pain,” ''Psychiatric Times'', 26:7, July 2009. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/articles/challenge-geriatric-pain</ref> Most pains are [[Rheumatism|rheumatological]] or [[Malignancy|malignant]].<ref>Gary McCleane and Howard Smith, editors, ''Clinical Management of the Elderly Patient in Pain'' (CRC Press, 2006). 150.</ref>

* '''Sexual activity''' decreases significantly with age, especially after age 60, for both women and men.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1001/archinte.1990.00390130161026|pmid=2297288|title=Sexual Function in the Elderly|journal=Archives of Internal Medicine|volume=150|issue=1|pages=197–200|year=1990|last1=Diokno|first1=Ananias C.|last2=Brown|first2=M. B.|last3=Herzog|first3=A. R.}}</ref> Sexual drive in both men and women decreases as they age.<ref>“Sexual health” at ” http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/loss-of-sex-drive/AN01431. Accessed December 26, 2013</ref>
* '''Skin''' loses elasticity, becomes drier, and more lined and wrinkled.<ref name="webmd.com"/>

* '''Sleep''' trouble holds a chronic prevalence of over 50% in old age and results in daytime sleepiness.<ref>Jana R. Cooke, MD, “Sleep Disorders in the Elderly,” Psychiatric Times 25.4 (2008).</ref> In a study of 9,000 persons with a mean age of 74, only 12% reported no sleep complaints.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=15486596|pmc=427621|year=2004|author1=McCall|first1=W. V.|title=Sleep in the Elderly: Burden, Diagnosis, and Treatment|journal=Primary care companion to the Journal of clinical psychiatry|volume=6|issue=1|pages=9–20}}</ref> By age 65, [[Slow-wave sleep|deep sleep]] goes down to about 5%.<ref>Julie K. Silver, M.D., “Aging and Energy: Why Energy Levels Go down as We Get Older” (2008) at http://www.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474977424338</ref>

* '''Taste buds''' diminish so that by age 80 [[taste bud]]s are down to 50% of normal. Food becomes less appealing and nutrition can suffer.<ref>“The Normal Aging Process” at http://wahsa.org/agingprocess.pdf and http://www.documbase.com/The-Normal-Aging-Process.pdf. Accessed December 10, 2013.</ref>

* '''Urinary incontinence''' is often found in old age.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=7039134|pmc=1273322|year=1981|author1=Ouslander|first1=J. G.|title=Urinary incontinence in the elderly|journal=The Western journal of medicine|volume=135|issue=6|pages=482–91}}</ref>

* '''Voice.''' In old age, vocal cords weaken and vibrate more slowly. This results in a weakened, breathy voice that is sometimes called an “old person’s voice.”<ref>NBC News Health, “The wavery, shaky 'old person's voice,' explained.” http://www.nbcnews.com/health/wavery-shaky-old-persons-voice-explained-1C8119298</ref>

===Mental marks of old age===
Mental marks of old age include the following.

* '''Adaptable''' describes most people in their old age. In spite the stressfulness of old age, they are described as “agreeable” and “accepting.” However, old age dependence induces feelings of incompetence and worthlessness in a minority.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 608-609.</ref>

* '''Caution''' marks old age. This antipathy toward “risk-taking” stems from the fact that old people have less to gain and more to lose by taking risks than younger people.<ref>Richard A. Posner, ''Aging and Old Age'' (University of Chicago, 1995), 112, 116.</ref>

* '''Depressed mood.'''<ref>Kennedy G.J. The epidemiology of late-life depression. In: Kennedy G. J, editor. Suicide and depression in late life: Critical issues in treatment, research and public policy. New York: John Wiley and Sons; 1996. pp. 23–37.</ref> According to Cox, [[Lyn Yvonne Abramson|Abramson]], [[Patricia Devine|Devine]], and Hollon (2012), old age is a risk factor for depression caused by prejudice (i.e., “deprejudice”). When people are prejudiced against the elderly and then become old themselves, their anti-elderly prejudice turns inward, causing depression. “People with more negative age stereotypes will likely have higher rates of depression as they get older.”<ref name="Cox et al. (2012)">{{cite journal |doi=10.1177/1745691612455204|title=Stereotypes, Prejudice, and Depression: The Integrated Perspective|journal=Perspectives on Psychological Science|volume=7|issue=5|pages=427|year=2012|last1=Cox|first1=W. T. L.|last2=Abramson|first2=L. Y.|last3=Devine|first3=P. G.|last4=Hollon|first4=S. D.}}</ref> Old age depression results in the over-65 population having the highest suicide rate.<ref name="Laura E. Berk 2010">Laura E. Berk, Development Through the Lifespan, (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 610.</ref>

* '''Fear''' of crime in old age, especially among the frail, sometimes weighs more heavily than concerns about finances or health and restricts what they do. The fear persists in spite of the fact that old people are victims of crime less often than younger people.<ref>Laura E. Berk, Development Through the Lifespan, (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 617.</ref>

* '''Mental disorders''' afflict about 15% of people aged 60+ according to estimates by the World Health Organization.<ref>“Mental health and older adults” at http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs381/en/. Accessed December 29, 2013.</ref> Another survey taken in 15 countries reported that mental disorders of adults interfered with their daily activities more than physical problems.<ref name="Laura E. Berk 2010"/>

* '''Reduced mental and cognitive ability''' afflicts old age.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2008.09.023|pmid=19231028|pmc=2683339|title=When does age-related cognitive decline begin?|journal=Neurobiology of Aging|volume=30|issue=4|pages=507–14|year=2009|last1=Salthouse|first1=Timothy A.}}</ref> [[Memory and aging|Memory loss]] is common in old age due to the decrease in speed of information being encoded, stored, and retrieved. It takes more time to learn new information.<ref>“Memory loss and aging” and “Mild cognitive impairment” by the Mayo Clinic staff. Online at http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/memory-loss/HQ00094. Accessed November 4, 2013</ref> Dementia is a general term for memory loss and other intellectual abilities serious enough to interfere with daily life. Its prevalence increases in old age from about 10% at age 65 to about 50% over age 85.<ref>Susan Jacoby, ''Never Say Die'' (Vintage, 2011) 12.</ref> [[Alzheimer's disease]] accounts for 50 to 80 percent of dementia cases. Demented behavior can include wandering, physical aggression, verbal outbursts, depression, and psychosis.<ref>“Alzheimer's disease” by Mayo Clinic Staff. Online at http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers-disease/DS00161. Accessed November 14, 2013.</ref>

* '''Set in one’s ways''' describes a mind set of old age.<ref>George P. Moschis, ''Marketing to Older Consumers'' (Praeger, 1992), 102.</ref> A study of over 400 distinguished men and women in old age found a “preference for the routine.”<ref>Martin S. Lindauer, ''Aging, Creativity, and Art'' (Springer, 2003), 55-56.</ref> Explanations include old age’s toll on the “fluid intelligence” and the “more deeply entrenched” ways of the old.<ref>Richard A. Posner, ''Aging and Old Age'' (University of Chicago, 1995), 116.</ref>

==Perceptions of old age==
The literature regarding old age includes perceptions of old age from a middle-age perspective, from an old-age perspective, from society’s perspective, and from a simulated perspective.

===Old age from a middle-age perspective===
Numerous books by middle-age writers depict their perceptions of old people.<ref>''How to Survive Your Aging Parents'' (Surrey, 2001); ''Are Your Parents Driving You Crazy?'' (Vanderwyk & Burnham, 2005); “How to Talk to Your Elderly Parent Without Losing Your Mind,” http://voices.yahoo.com/how-talk-elderly-parent-without-losing-454318.html; ''Coping With Your Difficult Older Parent: A Guide for Stressed-Out Children'' (William Morrow, 1999); ''Caring for Yourself While Caring for Your Aging Parents: How to Help, How to Survive'' (Holt, 2005); ''The Caregiver's Survival Handbook: Caring for Your Aging Parents Without Losing Yourself'' (Perigee, 2011).</ref> One writer notices the change in his parents: they move slowly, they have lost strength, they repeat stories, their minds wander, and they fret.<ref>David Solie, ''How to Say It to Seniors: Closing the Communication Gap with Our Elders'' (Prentice Hall, 2004) , 2.</ref> Another writer sees her aged parents and is bewildered: they refuse to follow her advice, they are obsessed with the past, they avoid risk, they live at a “glacial pace.”<ref>Connie Matthiessen, Caring.com Senior Editor, “Demystifying Your Aging Parents' New Stage of Life,” http://www.caring.com/articles/elderly-communication. Accessed February 17, 2014.</ref>

Other writers treat the perceptions of middle-age people regarding their own old age. In her ''The Denial of Aging'', Dr. Muriel R. Gillick, a [[Baby boomers|baby boomer]], accuses her contemporaries of believing that by proper exercise and diet they can avoid the scourges of old age and proceed from middle age to death.<ref>Gillick, ''The Denial of Aging: Perpetual Youth, Eternal Life, and Other Dangerous Fantasies'' (Harvard, 2007), 5-6.</ref> Studies find that many people in the 55-75 range can postpone morbidity by practicing healthy life styles. However, at about age 80, all people experience similar morbidity.<ref>Waneen Wyrick Spirduso, Karen L. Francis, Priscilla G. MacRae, ''Physical Dimensions of Aging'' (Human Kinetics, 2004), 26.</ref> Even with healthy life styles, most 85+ people will undergo extended “frailty and disability.”<ref>Susan Jacoby, ''Never Say Die: The Myth and Marketing of the New Old Age'' (Pantheon, 2011), 12.</ref>

===Old age from an old-age perspective===
Early old age is a pleasant time: children are grown, retirement from work, time to pursue interests.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'' (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 603.</ref> In contrast, perceptions of old age by writers 80+ years old, “old age in the real meaning of the term.”<ref name="Tor Inge Romoren 2003"/> tend to be negative.

Lillian Rubin, active in her 80s as an author, sociologist, and psychotherapist, opens her book ''60 on Up: The Truth about Aging in America'' with “getting old sucks. It always has, it always will.” Dr. Rubin contrasts the “real old age” with the “rosy pictures” painted by middle-age writers.<ref>Lillian B. Rubin, ''60 on Up: The Truth About Aging in America'' (Beacon, 2007), 1, 7-8.</ref>

Writing at the age of 87, Mary C. Morrison delineates the heroism required by old age: to live through the disintegration of one’s own body or that of someone you love. Morrison concludes, “old age is not for the fainthearted.”<ref>Mary C. Morrison, ''Let Evening Come'' (1998), 2-3.</ref> In the book ''Life Beyond 85 Years'', the 150 interviewees had to cope with physical and mental debilitation and with losses of loved ones. One interviewee described living in old age as “pure hell.”<ref>Colleen Johnson and Barbara M. Barer, ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' (Prometheus, 2003), 7-8, 208.</ref>

===Old age from society’s perspective===
Historical periods reveal a mixed picture of the “position and status” of old people, but there has never been a “golden age of aging.”<ref name="Susan M 2014">Susan M. Hillier and Georgia M. Barrow, ''Aging, The Individual & Society'' (Cengage, 10th edition, 2014), 6.</ref> Studies have disproved the popular belief that in the past old people were venerated by society and cared for by their families.<ref>Paul Johnson and Pat Thane, editors, ''Old Age from Antiquity to Post-Modernity'' (Routledge, 1998), 1.</ref> Veneration for and antagonism toward the aged have coexisted in complex relationships throughout history.<ref>Jonathan Dewald, ''Europe 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World'', Volume 6, “Attitudes Toward the Old” 4:315-316 (Scribner's/Thomson-Gale, 2004). Online at http://www.answers.com/topic/old-age</ref>

In ancient times, the very few people who lived beyond 35 physically and mentally healthy, especially those of social status and wealth, were treated with “respect and awe.” In contrast, those who were frail were seen as a burden and ignored or in extreme cases killed.<ref name="Susan M 2014"/> People were defined as “old” because of their inability to perform useful tasks rather than their years.<ref>Paul Johnson and Pat Thane, editors, ''Old Age from Antiquity to Post-Modernity'' (Routledge, 1998), 6.</ref>

In Greek and Roman cultures, old age was denigrated as a time of “decline and decrepitude.”<ref>Susan M. Hillier and Georgia M. Barrow, ''Aging, The Individual & Society'' (Cengage, 10th edition, 2014), 6-7.</ref>

In the Classical period, “beauty and strength” were esteemed and old age was viewed as defiling and ugly. The Medieval and Renaissance periods depicted old age as “cruel or weak.”<ref name="ReferenceB">Susan M. Hillier and Georgia M. Barrow, ''Aging, The Individual & Society'' (Cengage, 10th edition, 2014), 7.</ref>

In the Modern period, the “cultural status” of old people has declined in many cultures.<ref name="ReferenceB"/>

Research on age-related attitudes consistently finds that negative attitudes exceed positive attitudes toward old people because of their looks and behavior<ref>James E. Birren and K Warner Schaie, eds., ''Handbook of the Psychology of Aging'' (Academic, 2011), 253.</ref> In his study ''Aging and Old Age'', Posner discovers “resentment and disdain of older people” in American society.<ref>Richard A. Posner, ''Aging and Old Age'' (University of Chicago, 1997), 320.</ref>

Harvard University’s [[Implicit-association test]] measures implicit “attitudes and beliefs” about Young vis a vis Old.<ref>https://www.projectimplicit.net/about.html{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref> ''Blind Spot: Hidden Biases of Good People'', a book about the test, reports that 80% of Americans have an “automatic preference for the young over old” and that attitude is true worldwide. The young are “consistent in their negative attitude” toward the old.<ref>Mahzarin R. Banaji and Anthony G. Greenwald, ''Blind Spot: Hidden Biases of Good People'' (Random House, 2013), 67.</ref> ''Ageism'' documents that Americans generally have “little tolerance for older persons and very few reservations about harboring negative attitudes” about them.<ref>Todd D. Nelson, ed, ''Ageism: Stereotyping and Prejudice Against Older Persons'' (Bradford, 2004), ix.</ref>

In spite of its prevalence, ageism<ref>ageism: discrimination based on age, especially prejudice against the elderly. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/ageism.</ref> is seldom the subject of public discourse.<ref>Judith E Phillips and others, ''Key Concepts in Social Gerontology'' (Sage, 2010), 23.</ref>

===Old age from simulated perspective===
Simone de Beauvoir wrote that “there is one form of experience that belongs only to those that are old – that of old age itself.”<ref>Simone de Beauvoir, ''The Coming of Age'', trans by Patrick O'Brian (Norton, 1996), 381.</ref> Nevertheless, simulations of old age attempt to help younger people gain some understanding.

Texas A&M University offers a plan for a “Aging Simulation” workshop.<ref>http://fcs.tamu.edu/families/aging/aging_simulation/index.php{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref> The workshop is adapted from ''Sensitizing People to the Processes of Aging''.<ref>''Sensitizing People to the Processes of Aging: The In-Service Educator’s Guide'' by Marvin Ernst and Herbert Shore, Dallas Geriatric Research Institute, 1977.</ref>
Some of the simulations follow:
:* Sight: Wearing swimmer’s goggles with black paper pasted to lens with only a small hole to simulate tunnel vision,
:* Hearing: Use ear plugs to dull the sound of people talking.
:* Touch: Wearing thick gloves, button a shirt or buckle a belt.
:* Dexterity: With tape around several fingers, unscrew a jar lid.
:* Mobility and Balance: Carry packages in one hand while using a walker.

The Macklin Intergenerational Institute conducts Xtreme Aging workshops, as depicted in the ''The New York Times''.<ref>John Leland, “Simulating Age 85, With Lessons on Offering Care” in ''The New York Times'', August 3, 2008, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/03/us/03aging.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0.</ref> A condensed version was presented on
NBC’s Today Show and is available online.<ref>http://www.today.com/video/today/27336610#27336610.</ref> One exercise was to lay out 3 sets of 5 slips of paper. On set #1, write your 5 most enjoyed activities; on set #2, write your 5 most valued possessions; on set #3, write your 5 most loved people. Then “lose” them one by one, trying to feel each loss, until you have lost them all as happens in old age.

==Old age frailty==
[[File:Blake London.jpg|thumb|300px| An image of an elderly man being guided by a young child accompanies [[William Blake]]'s poem ''[[London (William Blake poem)|London]]''. This image is a digital repercussion of his hand-painted 1826 print from Copy AA of ''[[Songs of Innocence and Experience]]''.The item is currently in the in the collection of the [[Fitzwilliam Museum]].<ref>{{cite web| url =http://www.blakearchive.org/exist/blake/archive/object.xq?objectid=songsie.aa.illbk.46&java=yes | title = Songs of Innocence and of Experience, object 46 (Bentley 46, Erdman 46, Keynes 46) "LONDON" | editors = Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi| publisher = [[William Blake Archive]]|accessdate = June 10, 2014}}</ref>]]
Most people in the age range of 60-80 (the years of retirement and early old age), enjoy rich possibilities for a full life, but the condition of [[Frailty syndrome|frailty]] distinguished by “bodily failure” and greater dependence becomes increasingly after that.<ref name="Tor Inge Romoren 2003">Tor Inge Romoren, ''Last Years of Long Lives: The Larvik Study'' (Routledge, 2003), 170.</ref> In the United States, hospital discharge data from 2003-2011 shows that injury was the common reason for hospitalization among patient aged 65+.<ref>{{cite web | author = Weiss AJ, Barrett ML, Andrews RM | title = Trends and Projections of U.S. Hospital Costs by Payer, 2003-2013 | work = HCUP Statistical Brief #176 | publisher = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality | location = Rockville, MD | date = July 2014 | url = http://hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb176-Hospital-Cost-Projections-by-Age-2013.jsp}}</ref>

[[Gerontology|Gerontologists]] note the lack of research regarding and the difficulty in defining frailty. However, they add that physicians recognize frailty when they see it.<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, editor, ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), xxi, 4, 6.</ref>

A group of [[Geriatrics|geriatricians]] proposed a general definition of frailty as “a physical state of increased vulnerability to stressors<ref>Stressor: Any deleterious force brought to bear on a bodily system that impairs its function. http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/stressors</ref> that results from decreased reserves and disregulation<ref>Dysregulation: impairment of a physiological regulatory mechanism (as that governing metabolism, immune response, or organ function). http://www.merriam-webster.com/medical/dysregulation.</ref> in multiple physiological systems.”<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, ed., ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), 20.</ref>

===Prevalence of frailty===
Frailty is a common condition in later old age, but different definitions of frailty produce diverse assessments of prevalence. One study placed the incidence of frailty for ages 65+ at 10.7%.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04054.x|pmid=22881367|title=Prevalence of Frailty in Community-Dwelling Older Persons: A Systematic Review|journal=Journal of the American Geriatrics Society|volume=60|issue=8|pages=1487|year=2012|last1=Collard|first1=Rose M.|last2=Boter|first2=Han|last3=Schoevers|first3=Robert A.|last4=Oude Voshaar|first4=Richard C.}}</ref> Another study placed the incidence of frailty in age 65+ population at 22% for women and 15% for men.<ref>Muriel R. Gillick M.D., ''Choosing Medical Care in Old Age: What Kind, How Much, When to Stop'' (Harvard, 1998), 106.</ref> A Canadian study illustrated how frailty increases with age and calculated the prevalence for 65+ as 22.4% and for 85+ as 43.7%.<ref>Laurie Barclay, “Prevalence of Frailty Increases Throughout Adulthood.” http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/741960. Accessed January 14, 2014.</ref>

A worldwide study of “patterns of frailty” based on data from 20 nations found (a) a consistent correlation between frailty and age, (b) a higher frequency among women, and (c) more frailty in wealthier nations where greater support and medical care increases longevity.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0075847|pmid=24204581|title=Patterns of Frailty in Older Adults: Comparing Results from Higher and Lower Income Countries Using the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) and the Study on Global AGEing and Adult Health (SAGE)|journal=PLoS ONE|volume=8|issue=10|pages=e75847|year=2013|last1=Harttgen|first1=Kenneth|last2=Kowal|first2=Paul|last3=Strulik|first3=Holger|last4=Chatterji|first4=Somnath|last5=Vollmer|first5=Sebastian|bibcode=2013PLoSO...875847H}}</ref>

In Norway, a 20-year longitudinal study of 400 people found that bodily failure and greater dependence became prevalent in the 80+ years. The study calls these years the “fourth age” or “old age in the real meaning of the term.” Similarly, the “Berlin Aging Study” rated over-all functionality on four levels: good, medium, poor, and very poor. People in their 70s were mostly rated good. In the 80-90 year range, the four levels of functionality were divided equally. By the 90-100 year range, 60% would be considered frail because of very poor functionality and only 5% still possessed good functionality.<ref name="Tor Inge Romoren 2003"/>

In the United States, the 85+ age group is the fastest growing, a group that is almost sure to face the “inevitable decrepitude” of survivors.<ref>Colleen Johnson and Barbara M. Barer, ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' (Prometheus, 2003), 3.</ref> (Frailty and decrepitude are synonyms.<ref>http://thesaurus.yourdictionary.com/frailty{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref>)

===Markers of frailty===
Three unique markers of frailty have been proposed: (a) loss of any notion of invincibility, (b) loss of ability to do things essential to one’s care, and (c) loss of possibility for a subsequent life stage.<ref>Nortin M. Hadler, ''Rethinking Aging: Growing Old and Living Well in an Overtreated Society'' (University of North Carolina, 2011), 159-160. http://www.amazon.com/Nortin-M.-Hadler/e/B001ITYO36.</ref>

Old age survivors on-average deteriorate from agility in their 65-80s to a period of frailty preceding death. This deterioration is gradual for some and precipitous for others. Frailty is marked by an array of [[Chronic (medicine)|chronic]] physical and mental problems which means that frailty is not treatable as a specific disease. These problems coupled with increased dependency in the [[Activities of daily living#Basic ADLs|basic activities of daily living (ADLs)]] required for personal care add emotional problems: depression and anxiety.<ref>Muriel R. Gillick, ''Lifelines: Living Longer, Growing Frail, Taking Heart'' (Norton, 2001), x, xv-xvi, 5-6.</ref> In sum, frailty has been depicted as a group of “complex issues,” distinct but “causally interconnected,” that often include “comorbid diseases,”,<ref>“diseases in addition to the primary disease”</ref> progressive weakness, stress, exhaustion, and depression.<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, ed., ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), 25-26.</ref>

===Misconceptions of frail people===
Johnson and Barer did a pioneering study of ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' by interviews over a six-year period. In talking with 85+ year olds, they found some popular conceptions about old age to be erroneous. Many studies of old age overlook the 85+ survivors so their conclusions do not apply. Such erroneous conceptions include (1) people in old age have a least one family member for support, (2) old age well-being requires social activity, and (3) “successful adaptation” to age-related changes demands a continuity of self-concept. In their interviews, Johnson and Barer found that 24% of the 85+ had no face-to-face family relationships; many have outlived their families. Second, that contrary to popular notions, the interviews revealed that the reduced activity and socializing of the over 85s does not harm their well-being; they “welcome increased detachment.” Third, rather than a continuity of self-concept, as the interviewees faced new situations they changed their “cognitive and emotional processes” and reconstituted their “self–representation.”<ref>Colleen Johnson and Barbara M. Barer, ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' (Prometheus, 2003), 5-6.</ref>

===Care and costs===
Frail people require a high level of care. Medical advances have made it possible to “postpone death” for years. This added time costs many frail people “prolonged sickness, dependence, pain, and suffering.”<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, editor, ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), 9.</ref>

According to a study by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the rate of ED visits was consistently highest among patients ages 85 years and older in 2006-2011 in the United States.<ref>{{cite web | author = Skiner HG, Blanchard J, Elixhauser A | title = Trends in Emergency Department Visits, 2006-2011 | work = HCUP Statistical Brief #179 | publisher = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality | location = Rockville, MD | date = September 2014 | url = https://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb179-Emergency-Department-Trends.jsp}}</ref>

These final years are also costly in economic terms.<ref>Barbara Logue, ''Last Rights: Death Control and the Elderly in America'' (Lexington Books/Macmillan, 1993), 17-18, 92.</ref> One out of every four Medicare dollars is spent on the frail in their last year of life . . . in attempts to postpone death.<ref>Penelope Wang, “Cutting the high cost of end-of-life care” (CNNMoney, 2012). http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/11/pf/end-of-life-care-duplicate-2.moneymag/. Accessed January 11, 2014. Also The Dartmouth Atlas Project, “Trends and Variation in End-of-Life Care for Medicare Beneficiaries with Severe Chronic Illness” (The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice Center for Health Policy Research, 2011). Online at http://www.dartmouthatlas.org/downloads/reports/EOL_Trend_Report_0411.pdf .</ref>

Medical treatments in the final days are not only economically costly, they are often unnecessary, even harmful.<ref>Penelope Wang, “Cutting the high cost of end-of-life care” (CNNMoney, 2012).</ref> Nortin Hadler, M.D. warns against the tendency to medicalize and overtreat the frail.<ref>Nortin M. Hadler, ''Rethinking Aging: Growing Old and Living Well in an Overtreated Society'' (University of North Carolina, 2011) 1, 3.</ref> In her ''Choosing Medical Care in Old Age'', Muriel R. Gillick M.D. argues that appropriate medical treatment for the frail is not the same as for the robust. The frail are vulnerable to “being tipped over” by any physical stress put on the system such as medical interventions.<ref>Muriel R. Gillick M.D., ''Choosing Medical Care in Old Age: What Kind, How Much, When to Stop'' (Harvard, 1998), 116, 189,</ref>

===Death and frailty===
Old age, death, and frailty are linked because approximately half the deaths in old age are preceded by months or years of frailty,<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, ed., ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), 3, 19.</ref>

''Older Adults' Views on Death'' is based on interviews with 109 people in the 70-90 age range, with a mean age of 80.7.
Almost 20% of the people wanted to use whatever treatment that might postpone death. About the same number said that given a terminal illness, they would choose assisted suicide. Roughly half chose doing nothing except live day by day until death comes naturally without medical or other intervention designed to prolong life. This choice was coupled with a desire to receive palliative care if needed.<ref>Victor G. Cicirelli, ''Older Adults' Views on Death'' (Springer, 2002), 6-7, 9, 12, 32.</ref>

About half of older adults suffer multimorbidity, that is, they have three or more chronic conditions.<ref>Johns Hopkins Medicine, “Multimorbidity,” http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/geriatric_medicine_gerontology/aging_research/health_services_research/multimorbidity.html. Accessed January 24, 2014.</ref> Medical advances have made it possible to “postpone death,” but in many cases this postponement adds “prolonged sickness, dependence, pain, and suffering,” a time that is costly in social, psychological, economic terms.<ref>Barbara Logue, ''Last Rights: Death Control and the Elderly in America'' (Lexington Books/Macmillan, 1993), 18, 72.</ref>

The longitudinal interviews of 150 age 85+ people summarized in ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' found “progressive terminal decline” in the year prior to death: constant fatigue, much sleep, detachment from people, things, and activities, simplified lives. Most of the interviewees did not fear death; some would welcome it. One person said, “living this long is pure hell.”
However, nearly everyone feared a long process of dying. Some wanted to die in their sleep; others wanted to die “on their feet.”<ref>Colleen Johnson and Barbara M. Barer, ''Life Beyond 85 Years'' (Prometheus, 2003), 202-207.</ref>

The study of ''Older Adults' Views on Death'' found that the more frail people were, the more “pain, suffering, and struggles” they were enduring, the more likely they were to “accept and welcome” death as a release from their misery. Their fear about the process of dying was that it would prolong their distress. Besides being a release from misery, some saw death as a way to reunion with departed loved ones. Others saw death as a way to free their caretakers from the burden of their care.<ref>Victor G. Cicirelli, ''Older Adults' Views on Death'' (Springer, 2002) 55, 270, 276.</ref>

==Religiosity in old age==
Mostly, at all times, old people have been more religious than young people.<ref>Grace Davie and John Vincent, “Progress Report: Religion and Old Age,” ''Ageing and Society'', 18, 1998, 110. Online at https://ore.exeter.ac.uk/repository/bitstream/handle/10036/57193/Davie%20Progress%20Report.pdf</ref> At the same time, wide cultural variations exist.<ref name="ReferenceC">Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 608.</ref>
In the United States, 90% of old age Hispanics view themselves as very, quite, or somewhat religious.<ref name="Melvin A. Kimble 1995">Melvin A. Kimble, Susan H. McFadden, James W. Ellor, eds.,''Aging, Spirituality, and Religion: A Handbook'', Vol 1 (Fortress, 1995), 125.</ref> The Pew Research Center’s study of black and white old people found that 62% of those in ages 65–74 and 70% in ages 75+ asserted that religion was “very important” to them. For all 65+ people, more women (76%) than men (53%) and more blacks (87%) than whites (63%) consider religion “very important” to them. This compares to 54% in the 30-49 age range.<ref>Pew Research Center, “Growing Old in America: Expectations vs. Reality” (2009) 10, 48. Online at http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/files/2010/10/Getting-Old-in-America.pdf.</ref>

In a British 20-year longitudinal study, less than half of the old people surveyed said that religion was “very important” to them and one-fourth said they had become less religious in old age.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010). 608.</ref> The late-life rise in religiosity is stronger in Japan than in the United States, but in the Netherlands it is minimal.<ref name="ReferenceC"/>

In the practice of religion, a study of 60+ people found that 25% read the Bible every day and over 40% look at religious TV.<ref>Melvin A. Kimble, Susan H. McFadden, James W. Ellor, eds.,''Aging, Spirituality, and Religion: A Handbook'', Vol 1 (Fortress, 1995), 12.</ref> Pew Research found that in the age 65+ range, 75% of whites and 87% of blacks pray daily<ref>Pew Research Center, “Growing Old in America: Expectations vs. Reality,” 2009, 45. Online at http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/files/2010/10/Getting-Old-in-America.pdf.</ref>

Participation in organized religion is not a good indicator of religiosity because transportation and health problems often hinder participation.<ref name="Melvin A. Kimble 1995"/>

==Demographic changes==
In the industrialized countries, life expectancy and, thus, the old age population have increased consistently over the last decades.<ref name="cdc.gov">{{Cite web|url=http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hus/hus08.pdf#026 |title=Table 26: Life expectancy at birth, at 65 years of age, and at 75 years of age by race and sex: United States, selected years, 1900 - 2005|author= |date= |work= |publisher=[[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]]|accessdate=26 August 2010}}</ref> In the United States the proportion of people aged 65 or older increased from 4% in 1900 to about 12% in 2000.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.census.gov/prod/2001pubs/c2kbr01-12.pdf|title=Census 2000 Brief, C2KBR/01-12, U.S.|publisher="Census Bureau"|location="Washington, DC"|accessdate=2009-03-17|last=Meyer|first=Julie|year=2001}}</ref> In 1900, only about {{Nowrap|3 million}} of the nation's citizens were 65 or older (out of 76 million total American citizens). By 2000, the number of senior citizens had increased to about 35 million (of 280 million US citizens). Population experts estimate that more than {{Nowrap|50 million}} Americans—about 17 percent of the population—will be 65 or older in 2020.<ref>”Number of old Americans” at http://www.agingstats.gov/Main_Site/Data/2012_Documents/Population.aspx. Accessed December 1, 2013.</ref> By 2050, it is projected that at least 400,000 Americans will be 100 or older.<ref>Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project, “Living to 120 and Beyond: Americans’ Views on Aging, Medical Advances and Radical Life Extension” (August 6, 2013). Online at http://www.pewforum.org/2013/08/06/living-to-120-and-beyond-americans-views-on-aging-medical-advances-and-radical-life-extension/</ref>

The number of old people is growing around the world chiefly because of the [[post–World War II baby boom]] and increases in the provision and standards of health care.<ref>United Nations, “World Population Ageing: 1950-2050" at http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/worldageing19502050/</ref> By 2050, 33% of the developed world’s population and almost 20% of the less developed world’s population will be over 60 years old.<ref>John Bond and others, editors, ''Ageing in Society'' (Sage, 2007 3rd ed), 1.</ref>

The growing number of people living to their 80s and 90s in the developed world has strained public welfare systems and has also resulted in increased incidence of diseases like cancer and dementia that were rarely seen in premodern times. When the United States Social Security program was created, persons older than 65 numbered only around 5% of the population and the average life expectancy of a 65 year old in 1936 was approximately 5 years, while in 2011 it could often range from 10–20 years. Other issues that can arise from an increasing population are growing demands for health care and an increase in demand for different types of services.<ref>http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v66n1/v66n1p1.html{{full|date=February 2015}}</ref>

Of the roughly 150,000 people who die each day across the globe, about two thirds—100,000 per day—die of age-related causes.<ref name="doi10.2202/1941-6008.1011">{{cite journal |doi=10.2202/1941-6008.1011|title=Life Span Extension Research and Public Debate: Societal Considerations|journal=Studies in Ethics, Law, and Technology|volume=1|year=2007|last1=De Grey|first1=Aubrey D.N.J}}</ref> In industrialized nations, the proportion is much higher, reaching 90%.<ref name="doi10.2202/1941-6008.1011"/>

==Psychosocial aspects==
[[File:Habibaadansalat.jpg|thumb|right|An elderly [[Somali people|Somali]] woman.]]
[[File:BuddhistMonk02.jpg|thumb|right|An elderly [[Khmer people|Khmer]] woman.]]
According to [[Erik Erikson]]’s "Eight Stages of Life" theory, the human personality is developed in a series of eight stages that take place from the time of birth and continue on throughout an individual’s complete life. He characterises old age as a period of "Integrity vs. Despair", during which a person focuses on reflecting back on his life. Those who are unsuccessful during this phase will feel that their life has been wasted and will experience many regrets. The individual will be left with feelings of bitterness and despair. Those who feel proud of their accomplishments will feel a sense of integrity. Successfully completing this phase means looking back with few regrets and a general feeling of satisfaction. These individuals will attain wisdom, even when confronting death.<ref>Erikson, E.H. (1968). ''Identity: Youth and Crisis''. New York: Norton.</ref><ref>Erikson, E.H. (1963). ''[[Childhood and Society]]''. (2nd ed.). New York: Norton.</ref><ref>Carver, C.S. & Scheir, M.F. (2000). ''Perspectives on Personality''. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon</ref> Coping is a very important skill needed in the aging process to move forward with life and not be 'stuck' in the past. The way a person adapts and copes, reflects his aging process on a psycho-social level.<ref>Yolanda Griffiths and Andrea Thinnes, “Psychological Aspects of Aging” at http://ot.creighton.edu/community/OT_FOR_ELDERS/3rd_Edition_Chapters/Proofs/Padilla_Chapter_04_main.pdf.</ref>

Newman & Newman proposed a ninth stage of life, Elderhood. Elderhood refers to those individuals who live past the life expectancy of their birth cohorts. There are two different types of people described in this stage of life. The "young old" are the healthy individuals who can function on their own without assistance and can complete their daily tasks independently. The "old old" are those who depend on specific services due to declining health or diseases. This period of life is characterized as a period of "immortality vs. extinction." Immortality is the belief that your life will go on past death, some examples are an afterlife or living on through one's family. Extinction refers to feeling as if life has no purpose.<ref>Barbara M. Newman, Philip R. Newman, ''Development Through Life: A Psychosocial Approach: A Psychosocial Approach'' (Cengage Learning, 2011), Ch 13 “Later Adulthood (60-75 Years)” and Ch 14, “Elderhood (75 until death).”</ref>

===Theories of old age===
Social theories, or concepts,<ref>“Theory: A conception . . . of something to be done, or of the method of doing it.” ''Oxford English Dictionary Online ''. December 2013.</ref> propose explanations for the distinctive relationships between old people and their societies.

One of the theories is the [[Disengagement theory|Disengagement Theory]] proposed in 1961. This theory proposes that in old age a mutual disengagement between people and their society occurs in anticipation of death. By becoming disengaged from work and family responsibilities, according to this concept, people are enabled to enjoy their old age without stress.
This theory has been subjected to the criticism that old age disengagement is neither natural, inevitable, nor beneficial.<ref>Michael Totten, “An Overview of Cumming and Henrys Social Disengagement Theory,” http://www.sciences360.com/index.php/an-overview-of-cumming-and-henrys-social-disengagement-theory-3750/.</ref> Furthermore, disengaging from social ties in old age is not across the board: unsatisfactory ties are dropped and satisfying ones kept.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 613.</ref>

In opposition to the Disengagement Theory the [[Activity theory (aging)|Activity Theory]] of old age argues that disengagement in old age occurs not by desire, but by the barriers to social engagement imposed by society. This theory has been faulted for not factoring in psychological changes that occur in old age as shown by reduced activity even when available. It has also been found that happiness in old age is not proportional to activity.<ref name="ReferenceA">Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 614.</ref>

According to the [[Continuity theory|Continuity Theory]], in spite of the inevitable differences imposed by their old age, most people try to maintain continuity in personhood, activities, and relationships with their younger days.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

[[Socioemotional selectivity theory|Socioemotional Selectivity Theory]] also depicts how people maintain continuity in old age. The focus of this theory is continuity sustained by social networks, albeit networks narrowed by choice and by circumstances. The choice is for more harmonious relationships. The circumstances are loss of relationships by death and distance.<ref>Laura E. Berk, ''Development Through the Lifespan'', (Allyn & Bacon, 2010), 614-615.</ref>

==Life expectancy==
Life expectancy by nation at birth in year 2011 ranged from 48 years to 82.<ref>http://wdi.worldbank.org/table/2.21. “Life expectancy at birth indicates the number of years a newborn infant would live if prevailing patterns of mortality at the time of its birth were to stay the same throughout its life.”</ref>

In most parts of the world women live, on average, longer than men; even so, the disparities vary between 12 years in Russia to no difference or higher [[life expectancy]] for men in countries such as Zimbabwe and Uganda.<ref>de Blij, Harm. The power of place. Geography, Destiny, and Globalization's Rough Landscape. [[Oxford University Press]]. London:2009. p161ff</ref>

The number of elderly persons worldwide began to surge in the second half of the 20th century. Up to that time (and still true in underdeveloped countries), five or less percent of the population was over 65. Few lived longer than their 70s and people who attained advanced age (i.e. their 80s) were rare enough to be a novelty and were revered as wise sages. The worldwide over 65 population in 1960 was one-third of the under 5 population. By 2013, the over 65 population had grown to equal the under 5 population. The over 65 population is projected to double the under five by 2050.<ref>National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, NIH Publication no. 11-7737, October 2011, “Global Health and Aging.” Online at http://www.who.int/ageing/publications/global_health.pdf.</ref>

Before the surge in the over 65 population, accidents and disease claimed many people before they could attain old age, and health problems in those over 65 meant a quick death in most cases. If a person lived to an advanced age, it was due to genetic factors and/or a relatively easy lifestyle, since diseases of old age could not be treated before the 20th century.<ref>”Deaths by cause, sex and mortality stratum in WHO regions” online at http://www.who.int/whr/2004/annex/topic/en/annex_2_en.pdf.</ref>

==Old age benefits==
German chancellor [[Otto von Bismarck]] created the world's first comprehensive government [[social safety net]] in the 1880s, providing for old age pensions.<ref name="britannica.com"/>

In the [[Social Security (United States)|United States of America]], and the [[Pensions in the United Kingdom|United Kingdom]], 65 (UK 60 for women) was traditionally the age of retirement with full old age benefits.<ref>For USA, “Old age benefits,” http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Old-Age+Benefits (Accessed December 28, 2013) and for UK, http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/pensions/article-1679780/New-state-pension-age-retire.html (Accessed December 28, 2013).</ref>

In 2003, the age at which a United States citizen became eligible for full Social Security benefits began to increase gradually, and will continue to do so until it reaches 67 in 2027. Full retirement age for Social Security benefits for people retiring in 2012 is age 66.<ref name="socialsecurity.gov">{{Cite web|url=http://www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/retirechart.htm |title=Age To Receive Full Social Security Retirement Benefits|author= |date= |work= |publisher=[[Social Security Administration|U.S. Social SecurityAdministration]]|accessdate=6 June 2011}}</ref> In the United Kingdom, the state pension age for men and women will rise to 66 in 2020 with further increases scheduled after that.”<ref>http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/pensions/article-1679780/New-state-pension-age-retire.html (Accessed December 28, 2013).</ref>

Originally, the purpose of old age pensions was to prevent elderly persons from being reduced to beggary, which is still common in some underdeveloped countries, but growing life expectancies and older populations have brought into question the model under which pension systems were designed.<ref>James H. Schulz and Robert H. Binstock, Aging Nation: The Economics and Politics of Growing Older in America (Johns Hopkins, 2008). 3-4.</ref> The dominant perception of the American old age population changed from “needy” and “worthy” to “powerful” and “greedy,” old people getting more than their share of the nation's resources.<ref>Laura Katz Olson, ''The Not-so-golden Years: Caregiving, the Frail Elderly, and the Long-term Care Establishment'' (Rowman and Littlefield, 2003), 4.</ref> However, in 2011, using a Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), the old age American poverty rate was measured as 15.9%.<ref>U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Administration on Aging, “A Profile of Older Americans: 2011," 1. Online at http://www.aoa.gov/Aging_Statistics/Profile/2011/docs/2011profile.pdf.</ref>

==Assistance: devices and personal==
[[File:Nursing home.JPG|thumb|Old man at a [[nursing home]] in [[Norway]].]]
In the USA in 2008, 11 million people aged 65+ lived alone: 5 million or 22% of ages 65–74, 4 million or 34% of ages 75–84, and 2 million or 41% of ages 85+. The 2007 gender breakdown for all people 65+ was men 19% and women 39%.<ref>Stanford Center on Longevity, “New Realities of an Older America: Challenges, Changes and Questions” online at http://longevity3.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/New-Realities-of-an-Older-America.pdf.</ref>

Many new assistive devices made especially for the home have enabled more old people to care for themselves [[activities of daily living]] (ADL). Able Data<ref>Maintained for the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research of the U.S. Dept. of Education.</ref> lists 40,000 assistive technology products in 20 categories.<ref>http://www.abledata.com/abledata.cfm?pageid=19327&ksectionid=19327. Accessed January 1, 2014.</ref> Some examples of devices are a medical alert and safety system, shower seat (making it so the person does not get tired in the shower and fall), a bed cane (offering support to those with unsteadiness getting in and out of bed) and an ADL cuff (used with eating utensils for people with paralysis or hand weakness).<ref>U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Assistive Device Use among the Elderly” online at http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/astdev.pdf and Elderly Health Service, Department of Health, Hong Kong, “Assistive Devices for Activities of Daily Living” online at http://www.info.gov.hk/elderly/english/healthinfo/elderly/assistivedevices-e.htm. Accessed November 30, 2013.</ref>

A Swedish study found that at age 76, 46% of the subjects used assistive devices. When they reached age 86, 69% used them. The subjects were ambivalent regarding the use of the assistive devices: as “enablers” or as “disablers.”<ref>Greta Häggblom-Kronlöf and Ulla Sonn, “Use of Assistive Devices – a Reality Full of Contradictions in Elderly Persons' Everyday Life,” ''Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology'', 2007, Vol. 2, No. 6 , Pages 335-345. http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17483100701701672. Accessed January 8, 2014.</ref> People who view assistive devices as enabling greater independence accept and use them. Those who see them as symbols of disability reject them.<ref>Laura N. Gitlin, “Why Older People Accept or Reject Assistive Technology,” ''Generations'', Vol. XIX, No. 1, Spring 1995. Online at http://www.homemods.org/resources/pages/accept.shtml.</ref>

Even with assistive devices as of 2006, 8½ million Americans needed personal assistance because of impaired [[Activities of daily living#Basic ADLs|basic activities of daily living (ADLs)]] required for personal care or impaired [[Activities of daily living#Instrumental ADLs|instrumental activities of daily living ( IADLs)]] required for independent living. Projections place this number at 21 million by 2030 when 40% of Americans over 70 will need assistance.<ref>Patricia M. Burbank, editor, ''Vulnerable Older Adults: Health Care Needs and Interventions'' (Springer, 2006), 17.</ref> There are many options for such long term care to those who require it. There is the [[home care]] in which a family member, volunteer, or trained professional will aid the person in need and help with daily activities. Another option is community services which can provide the person with transportation, meal plans, or activities in [[senior centers]]. A third option is [[assisted living]] where 24 hour round the clock supervision is given with aid in eating, bathing, dressing, etc. A final option is a [[nursing home]] which provides professional nursing care.<ref>Congressional Budget Office, “Rising Demand for Long-Term Services and Supports for Elderly People” (June 2013) online at http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/44363-LTC.pdf.</ref>

==See also==
*[[ageing]]
*[[aging in dogs]]
*[[aging in place]]
*[[centenarian]]
*[[elderly care]]
*[[Elder Village]]
*[[geriatric care management]]
*[[gerontology]]
*[[list of the verified oldest men]]
*[[list of the verified oldest women]]
*[[oldest people]]
*[[pensioner]]
*[[Respect for the Aged Day]]
*[[retirement home]]
*[[Silver Alert]]
*[[supercentenarian]]

==References==
{{Reflist|33em}}

==External links==
{{wikiquote|Age}}
{{Wiktionary|old age|eld|elderly}}
{{Commons category|Old people}}
*Milton Crum, “I’m Old” at Association of Hospice & Palliative Care Chaplains, http://www.ahpcc.org.uk/includes/articles/old.pdf or at The Center for Spiritual Resources, http://thecsr.org/resource-directory/im-old-an-essay-on-aging-by-milton-crum/#sthash.e87C5Jyc.dpuf.
*Laura Carstensen - research at Stanford university's [http://www-psych.stanford.edu/~lifespan/llc.htm ''Life-span Development Laboratory''], and [http://longevity.stanford.edu/about/people/leadership/carstensen ''Stanford Center on Longevity''].
*Milton Crum, “I’m Frail” at Association of Hospice & Palliative Care Chaplains, http://www.ahpcc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/imfrail.pdf.
*[http://www.ncoa.org/enhance-economic-security/economic-security-Initiative/savvy-saving-seniors/top-10-scams-targeting.html/ Scams targeting the elderly (NCOA)]
{{S-start}}
{{Succession box|title= [[Human development (biology)#Physical stages|Stages of human development]] |before=[[Middle age]]|after=[[Death]] |years=Old age}}
{{S-end}}
{{Humandevelopment}}

{{commons category|Senior citizens}}

[[Category:Old age| ]]
[[Category:Ageing]]
[[Category:Gerontology]]
[[Category:Euphemisms]]
[[Category:Elder law]]

Revision as of 23:23, 28 March 2015

Old Woman Dozing by Nicolaes Maes (1656). Royal Museums of Fine Arts, Brussels

Old age consists of ages nearing or surpassing the life expectancy of human beings, and thus the end of the human life cycle. Euphemisms and terms for old people include, old people (worldwide usage), seniors (American usage), senior citizens (British and American usage), older adults (in the social sciences[1]), the elderly, and elders (in many cultures —including the cultures of aboriginal people).

Old people often have limited regenerative abilities and are more susceptible to disease, syndromes, and sickness than younger adults. The organic process of ageing is called senescence,[2] the medical study of the aging process is gerontology,[3] and the study of diseases that afflict the elderly is geriatrics.[4] The elderly also face other social issues such as retirement, loneliness, and ageism.[5]

The chronological age denoted as "old age" varies culturally and historically. Thus, old age is "a social construct" rather than a definite "biological stage".[6]

Definitions

Definitions of old age include official definitions, popular definitions, sub-group definitions, and four dimensions as follows.

Official definitions

Old age comprises "the later part of life; the period of life after youth and middle age . . . , usually with reference to deterioration"[7] When old age begins cannot be universally defined because it shifts according to the context. The United Nations has agreed that 60+ years may be usually denoted as old age,[8] and this is the first attempt at an international definition of old age. However, for its study of old age in Africa, the World Health Organization (WHO) set 50 as the beginning of old age. At the same time, the WHO recognized that the developing world often defines old age, not by years, but by new roles, loss of previous roles, or inability to make active contribution to society.[9]

Most developed Western countries set the age of 60 to 65 for retirement and old-age social programs eligibility. However, various countries and societies reckon the onset of old age as anywhere from the mid-40s to the 70s.[10] Furthermore, the fact that life expectancy beyond 80 has become widespread has shifted definitions of old age.[11]

A Pew Research Center study of 2,929 Americans, age 18+, found that they hold very different definitions of old age. Respondents under 30 said that old age begins at 60, but respondents 65+ said 74.[12]

Most Britons define old age as starting at 59 according to a survey of 2,200 people in the UK. The under 25s reckon 54 as the beginning of old age. The 80+ define old age as starting at 68.[13] Another survey concluded that most Britons define the onset of old age as almost 70. Europeans on average set the start of old age at 62.[14]

Sub-group definitions

Gerontologists have recognized the very different conditions that people experience as they grow older within the years defined as old age. In developed countries, most people in their 60s and early 70s are still fit, active, and able to care for themselves.[15] However, after 75, they will become increasingly frail, a condition marked by serious mental and physical debilitation.[16]

Therefore, rather than lumping together all people who have been defined as old, some gerontologists have recognized the diversity of old age by defining sub-groups. One study distinguishes the young old (60 to 69), the middle old (70 to 79), and the very old (80+).[17] Another study’s sub-grouping is young-old ( 65 to 74), middle-old (75–84), and oldest-old (85+).[18] A third sub-grouping is “young old” (65-74), “old” (74-84), and "old-old" (85+).[19] Delineating sub-groups in the 65+ population enables a more accurate portrayal of significant life changes.[20]

Four dimensions

Old age comprises the four dimensions: chronological, biological, psychological, and social.[21] Chronological age may differ considerably from a person’s functional age. The distinguishing marks of old age normally occur in all five senses at different times and different rates for different persons.[22] In addition to chronological age, people can be considered old because of the other three dimensions of old age. For example, people may be considered old when they become grandparents or when they begin to do less or different work in retirement.[23]

Senior citizen

Senior citizen is a common euphemism for an old person used in American English, and sometimes in British English. It implies or means that the person being referred to is retired.[24][25][26][27] This in turn usually implies or in fact means that the person is over the retirement age, which varies according to country. Synonyms include old age pensioner or pensioner in British English, and retiree and senior in American English. Some dictionaries describe widespread usage of "senior citizen" for people over the age of 65.[28]

When defined in an official context, senior citizen is often used for legal or policy-related reasons in determining who is eligible for certain benefits available to the age group.

It is used in general usage instead of traditional terms such as old person, old-age pensioner, or elderly as a courtesy and to signify continuing relevance of and respect for this population group as "citizens" of society, of senior rank.[29]

The term was apparently coined in 1938 during a political campaign.[30] It has come into widespread use in recent decades in legislation, commerce, and common speech. Especially in less formal contexts, it is often abbreviated as "senior(s)", which is also used as an adjective.

In commerce, some businesses offer customers of a certain age a "senior discount". The age at which these discounts are available vary between 55, 60 or 65, and other criteria may also apply. Sometimes a special "senior discount card" or other proof of age needs to be obtained and produced to show entitlement.

Age qualifications

The age which qualifies for senior citizen status varies widely. In governmental contexts it is usually associated with an age at which pensions or medical benefits for the elderly become available. In commercial contexts, where it may serve as a marketing device to attract customers, the age is often significantly lower.[citation needed]

In the United States, the standard retirement age is currently 65 (gradually increasing to 67).[citation needed]

In Canada, the OASP (Old Age Security Pension) is available at 65 (gradually increasing to 67, starting in the period 2023-2029),[31] and the CPP (Canada Pension Plan) as early as age 60.

The AARP allows couples in which one spouse has reached the age of 50 to join, regardless of the age of the other spouse.

Marks of old age

The distinguishing marks associated with old age comprise both physical and mental characteristics.[32] The marks of old age are so unlike the marks of middle age that it has been suggested that, as an individual transitions into old age, he/she might well be thought of as different persons “time-sharing” the same identity.[33]

These marks do not occur at the same chronological age for everyone. Also, they occur at different rates and order for different people.[34] Because each person is unique, marks of old age vary between people, even those of the same chronological age.[35]

A basic mark of old age that affects both body and mind is “slowness of behavior.”[36] This “slowing down principle” finds a correlation between advancing age and slowness of reaction and task performance, both physical and mental.[37]

Physical marks of old age

Physical marks of old age include the following:

  • Bone and joint. Old bones are marked by “thinning and shrinkage.” This results in a loss of height (about two inches by age 80), a stooping posture in many people, and a greater susceptibility to bone and joint diseases such as osteoarthritis and osteoporosis.[38]
  • Chronic diseases. Most older persons have at least one chronic condition and many have multiple conditions. In 2007-2009, the most frequently occurring conditions among older persons in the United States were uncontrolled hypertension (34%), diagnosed arthritis (50%), and heart disease (32%).[39]
  • Digestive system. About 40% of the time, old age is marked by digestive disorders such as difficulty in swallowing, inability to eat enough and to absorb nutrition, constipation and bleeding.[41]
  • Eyesight. Diminished eyesight makes it more difficult to read in low lighting and in smaller print. Speed with which an individual reads and the ability to locate objects may also be impaired.[42]
  • Falls. Old age spells risk for injury from falls that might not cause injury to a younger person.[43] Every year, about one-third of those 65 years old and over half of those 80 years old fall.[44] Falls are the leading cause of injury and death for old people.[45]
  • Hair usually becomes thinner and grayer.[46]
  • Hearing. By age 75 and older, 48% of men and 37% of women encounter impairments in hearing. Of the 26.7 million people over age 50 with a hearing impairment, only one in seven uses a hearing aid.[47]
  • Hearts are less efficient in old age with a resulting loss of stamina. In addition, atherosclerosis can constrict blood flow.[46]
  • Lungs expand less well; thus, they provide less oxygen.[38]
  • Pain afflicts old people at least 25% of the time, increasing with age up to 80% for those in nursing homes.[49] Most pains are rheumatological or malignant.[50]
  • Sexual activity decreases significantly with age, especially after age 60, for both women and men.[51] Sexual drive in both men and women decreases as they age.[52]
  • Skin loses elasticity, becomes drier, and more lined and wrinkled.[46]
  • Sleep trouble holds a chronic prevalence of over 50% in old age and results in daytime sleepiness.[53] In a study of 9,000 persons with a mean age of 74, only 12% reported no sleep complaints.[54] By age 65, deep sleep goes down to about 5%.[55]
  • Taste buds diminish so that by age 80 taste buds are down to 50% of normal. Food becomes less appealing and nutrition can suffer.[56]
  • Urinary incontinence is often found in old age.[57]
  • Voice. In old age, vocal cords weaken and vibrate more slowly. This results in a weakened, breathy voice that is sometimes called an “old person’s voice.”[58]

Mental marks of old age

Mental marks of old age include the following.

  • Adaptable describes most people in their old age. In spite the stressfulness of old age, they are described as “agreeable” and “accepting.” However, old age dependence induces feelings of incompetence and worthlessness in a minority.[59]
  • Caution marks old age. This antipathy toward “risk-taking” stems from the fact that old people have less to gain and more to lose by taking risks than younger people.[60]
  • Depressed mood.[61] According to Cox, Abramson, Devine, and Hollon (2012), old age is a risk factor for depression caused by prejudice (i.e., “deprejudice”). When people are prejudiced against the elderly and then become old themselves, their anti-elderly prejudice turns inward, causing depression. “People with more negative age stereotypes will likely have higher rates of depression as they get older.”[62] Old age depression results in the over-65 population having the highest suicide rate.[63]
  • Fear of crime in old age, especially among the frail, sometimes weighs more heavily than concerns about finances or health and restricts what they do. The fear persists in spite of the fact that old people are victims of crime less often than younger people.[64]
  • Mental disorders afflict about 15% of people aged 60+ according to estimates by the World Health Organization.[65] Another survey taken in 15 countries reported that mental disorders of adults interfered with their daily activities more than physical problems.[63]
  • Reduced mental and cognitive ability afflicts old age.[66] Memory loss is common in old age due to the decrease in speed of information being encoded, stored, and retrieved. It takes more time to learn new information.[67] Dementia is a general term for memory loss and other intellectual abilities serious enough to interfere with daily life. Its prevalence increases in old age from about 10% at age 65 to about 50% over age 85.[68] Alzheimer's disease accounts for 50 to 80 percent of dementia cases. Demented behavior can include wandering, physical aggression, verbal outbursts, depression, and psychosis.[69]
  • Set in one’s ways describes a mind set of old age.[70] A study of over 400 distinguished men and women in old age found a “preference for the routine.”[71] Explanations include old age’s toll on the “fluid intelligence” and the “more deeply entrenched” ways of the old.[72]

Perceptions of old age

The literature regarding old age includes perceptions of old age from a middle-age perspective, from an old-age perspective, from society’s perspective, and from a simulated perspective.

Old age from a middle-age perspective

Numerous books by middle-age writers depict their perceptions of old people.[73] One writer notices the change in his parents: they move slowly, they have lost strength, they repeat stories, their minds wander, and they fret.[74] Another writer sees her aged parents and is bewildered: they refuse to follow her advice, they are obsessed with the past, they avoid risk, they live at a “glacial pace.”[75]

Other writers treat the perceptions of middle-age people regarding their own old age. In her The Denial of Aging, Dr. Muriel R. Gillick, a baby boomer, accuses her contemporaries of believing that by proper exercise and diet they can avoid the scourges of old age and proceed from middle age to death.[76] Studies find that many people in the 55-75 range can postpone morbidity by practicing healthy life styles. However, at about age 80, all people experience similar morbidity.[77] Even with healthy life styles, most 85+ people will undergo extended “frailty and disability.”[78]

Old age from an old-age perspective

Early old age is a pleasant time: children are grown, retirement from work, time to pursue interests.[79] In contrast, perceptions of old age by writers 80+ years old, “old age in the real meaning of the term.”[80] tend to be negative.

Lillian Rubin, active in her 80s as an author, sociologist, and psychotherapist, opens her book 60 on Up: The Truth about Aging in America with “getting old sucks. It always has, it always will.” Dr. Rubin contrasts the “real old age” with the “rosy pictures” painted by middle-age writers.[81]

Writing at the age of 87, Mary C. Morrison delineates the heroism required by old age: to live through the disintegration of one’s own body or that of someone you love. Morrison concludes, “old age is not for the fainthearted.”[82] In the book Life Beyond 85 Years, the 150 interviewees had to cope with physical and mental debilitation and with losses of loved ones. One interviewee described living in old age as “pure hell.”[83]

Old age from society’s perspective

Historical periods reveal a mixed picture of the “position and status” of old people, but there has never been a “golden age of aging.”[84] Studies have disproved the popular belief that in the past old people were venerated by society and cared for by their families.[85] Veneration for and antagonism toward the aged have coexisted in complex relationships throughout history.[86]

In ancient times, the very few people who lived beyond 35 physically and mentally healthy, especially those of social status and wealth, were treated with “respect and awe.” In contrast, those who were frail were seen as a burden and ignored or in extreme cases killed.[84] People were defined as “old” because of their inability to perform useful tasks rather than their years.[87]

In Greek and Roman cultures, old age was denigrated as a time of “decline and decrepitude.”[88]

In the Classical period, “beauty and strength” were esteemed and old age was viewed as defiling and ugly. The Medieval and Renaissance periods depicted old age as “cruel or weak.”[89]

In the Modern period, the “cultural status” of old people has declined in many cultures.[89]

Research on age-related attitudes consistently finds that negative attitudes exceed positive attitudes toward old people because of their looks and behavior[90] In his study Aging and Old Age, Posner discovers “resentment and disdain of older people” in American society.[91]

Harvard University’s Implicit-association test measures implicit “attitudes and beliefs” about Young vis a vis Old.[92] Blind Spot: Hidden Biases of Good People, a book about the test, reports that 80% of Americans have an “automatic preference for the young over old” and that attitude is true worldwide. The young are “consistent in their negative attitude” toward the old.[93] Ageism documents that Americans generally have “little tolerance for older persons and very few reservations about harboring negative attitudes” about them.[94]

In spite of its prevalence, ageism[95] is seldom the subject of public discourse.[96]

Old age from simulated perspective

Simone de Beauvoir wrote that “there is one form of experience that belongs only to those that are old – that of old age itself.”[97] Nevertheless, simulations of old age attempt to help younger people gain some understanding.

Texas A&M University offers a plan for a “Aging Simulation” workshop.[98] The workshop is adapted from Sensitizing People to the Processes of Aging.[99] Some of the simulations follow:

  • Sight: Wearing swimmer’s goggles with black paper pasted to lens with only a small hole to simulate tunnel vision,
  • Hearing: Use ear plugs to dull the sound of people talking.
  • Touch: Wearing thick gloves, button a shirt or buckle a belt.
  • Dexterity: With tape around several fingers, unscrew a jar lid.
  • Mobility and Balance: Carry packages in one hand while using a walker.

The Macklin Intergenerational Institute conducts Xtreme Aging workshops, as depicted in the The New York Times.[100] A condensed version was presented on NBC’s Today Show and is available online.[101] One exercise was to lay out 3 sets of 5 slips of paper. On set #1, write your 5 most enjoyed activities; on set #2, write your 5 most valued possessions; on set #3, write your 5 most loved people. Then “lose” them one by one, trying to feel each loss, until you have lost them all as happens in old age.

Old age frailty

An image of an elderly man being guided by a young child accompanies William Blake's poem London. This image is a digital repercussion of his hand-painted 1826 print from Copy AA of Songs of Innocence and Experience.The item is currently in the in the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum.[102]

Most people in the age range of 60-80 (the years of retirement and early old age), enjoy rich possibilities for a full life, but the condition of frailty distinguished by “bodily failure” and greater dependence becomes increasingly after that.[80] In the United States, hospital discharge data from 2003-2011 shows that injury was the common reason for hospitalization among patient aged 65+.[103]

Gerontologists note the lack of research regarding and the difficulty in defining frailty. However, they add that physicians recognize frailty when they see it.[104]

A group of geriatricians proposed a general definition of frailty as “a physical state of increased vulnerability to stressors[105] that results from decreased reserves and disregulation[106] in multiple physiological systems.”[107]

Prevalence of frailty

Frailty is a common condition in later old age, but different definitions of frailty produce diverse assessments of prevalence. One study placed the incidence of frailty for ages 65+ at 10.7%.[108] Another study placed the incidence of frailty in age 65+ population at 22% for women and 15% for men.[109] A Canadian study illustrated how frailty increases with age and calculated the prevalence for 65+ as 22.4% and for 85+ as 43.7%.[110]

A worldwide study of “patterns of frailty” based on data from 20 nations found (a) a consistent correlation between frailty and age, (b) a higher frequency among women, and (c) more frailty in wealthier nations where greater support and medical care increases longevity.[111]

In Norway, a 20-year longitudinal study of 400 people found that bodily failure and greater dependence became prevalent in the 80+ years. The study calls these years the “fourth age” or “old age in the real meaning of the term.” Similarly, the “Berlin Aging Study” rated over-all functionality on four levels: good, medium, poor, and very poor. People in their 70s were mostly rated good. In the 80-90 year range, the four levels of functionality were divided equally. By the 90-100 year range, 60% would be considered frail because of very poor functionality and only 5% still possessed good functionality.[80]

In the United States, the 85+ age group is the fastest growing, a group that is almost sure to face the “inevitable decrepitude” of survivors.[112] (Frailty and decrepitude are synonyms.[113])

Markers of frailty

Three unique markers of frailty have been proposed: (a) loss of any notion of invincibility, (b) loss of ability to do things essential to one’s care, and (c) loss of possibility for a subsequent life stage.[114]

Old age survivors on-average deteriorate from agility in their 65-80s to a period of frailty preceding death. This deterioration is gradual for some and precipitous for others. Frailty is marked by an array of chronic physical and mental problems which means that frailty is not treatable as a specific disease. These problems coupled with increased dependency in the basic activities of daily living (ADLs) required for personal care add emotional problems: depression and anxiety.[115] In sum, frailty has been depicted as a group of “complex issues,” distinct but “causally interconnected,” that often include “comorbid diseases,”,[116] progressive weakness, stress, exhaustion, and depression.[117]

Misconceptions of frail people

Johnson and Barer did a pioneering study of Life Beyond 85 Years by interviews over a six-year period. In talking with 85+ year olds, they found some popular conceptions about old age to be erroneous. Many studies of old age overlook the 85+ survivors so their conclusions do not apply. Such erroneous conceptions include (1) people in old age have a least one family member for support, (2) old age well-being requires social activity, and (3) “successful adaptation” to age-related changes demands a continuity of self-concept. In their interviews, Johnson and Barer found that 24% of the 85+ had no face-to-face family relationships; many have outlived their families. Second, that contrary to popular notions, the interviews revealed that the reduced activity and socializing of the over 85s does not harm their well-being; they “welcome increased detachment.” Third, rather than a continuity of self-concept, as the interviewees faced new situations they changed their “cognitive and emotional processes” and reconstituted their “self–representation.”[118]

Care and costs

Frail people require a high level of care. Medical advances have made it possible to “postpone death” for years. This added time costs many frail people “prolonged sickness, dependence, pain, and suffering.”[119]

According to a study by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the rate of ED visits was consistently highest among patients ages 85 years and older in 2006-2011 in the United States.[120]

These final years are also costly in economic terms.[121] One out of every four Medicare dollars is spent on the frail in their last year of life . . . in attempts to postpone death.[122]

Medical treatments in the final days are not only economically costly, they are often unnecessary, even harmful.[123] Nortin Hadler, M.D. warns against the tendency to medicalize and overtreat the frail.[124] In her Choosing Medical Care in Old Age, Muriel R. Gillick M.D. argues that appropriate medical treatment for the frail is not the same as for the robust. The frail are vulnerable to “being tipped over” by any physical stress put on the system such as medical interventions.[125]

Death and frailty

Old age, death, and frailty are linked because approximately half the deaths in old age are preceded by months or years of frailty,[126]

Older Adults' Views on Death is based on interviews with 109 people in the 70-90 age range, with a mean age of 80.7. Almost 20% of the people wanted to use whatever treatment that might postpone death. About the same number said that given a terminal illness, they would choose assisted suicide. Roughly half chose doing nothing except live day by day until death comes naturally without medical or other intervention designed to prolong life. This choice was coupled with a desire to receive palliative care if needed.[127]

About half of older adults suffer multimorbidity, that is, they have three or more chronic conditions.[128] Medical advances have made it possible to “postpone death,” but in many cases this postponement adds “prolonged sickness, dependence, pain, and suffering,” a time that is costly in social, psychological, economic terms.[129]

The longitudinal interviews of 150 age 85+ people summarized in Life Beyond 85 Years found “progressive terminal decline” in the year prior to death: constant fatigue, much sleep, detachment from people, things, and activities, simplified lives. Most of the interviewees did not fear death; some would welcome it. One person said, “living this long is pure hell.” However, nearly everyone feared a long process of dying. Some wanted to die in their sleep; others wanted to die “on their feet.”[130]

The study of Older Adults' Views on Death found that the more frail people were, the more “pain, suffering, and struggles” they were enduring, the more likely they were to “accept and welcome” death as a release from their misery. Their fear about the process of dying was that it would prolong their distress. Besides being a release from misery, some saw death as a way to reunion with departed loved ones. Others saw death as a way to free their caretakers from the burden of their care.[131]

Religiosity in old age

Mostly, at all times, old people have been more religious than young people.[132] At the same time, wide cultural variations exist.[133]

In the United States, 90% of old age Hispanics view themselves as very, quite, or somewhat religious.[134] The Pew Research Center’s study of black and white old people found that 62% of those in ages 65–74 and 70% in ages 75+ asserted that religion was “very important” to them. For all 65+ people, more women (76%) than men (53%) and more blacks (87%) than whites (63%) consider religion “very important” to them. This compares to 54% in the 30-49 age range.[135]

In a British 20-year longitudinal study, less than half of the old people surveyed said that religion was “very important” to them and one-fourth said they had become less religious in old age.[136] The late-life rise in religiosity is stronger in Japan than in the United States, but in the Netherlands it is minimal.[133]

In the practice of religion, a study of 60+ people found that 25% read the Bible every day and over 40% look at religious TV.[137] Pew Research found that in the age 65+ range, 75% of whites and 87% of blacks pray daily[138]

Participation in organized religion is not a good indicator of religiosity because transportation and health problems often hinder participation.[134]

Demographic changes

In the industrialized countries, life expectancy and, thus, the old age population have increased consistently over the last decades.[139] In the United States the proportion of people aged 65 or older increased from 4% in 1900 to about 12% in 2000.[140] In 1900, only about 3 million of the nation's citizens were 65 or older (out of 76 million total American citizens). By 2000, the number of senior citizens had increased to about 35 million (of 280 million US citizens). Population experts estimate that more than 50 million Americans—about 17 percent of the population—will be 65 or older in 2020.[141] By 2050, it is projected that at least 400,000 Americans will be 100 or older.[142]

The number of old people is growing around the world chiefly because of the post–World War II baby boom and increases in the provision and standards of health care.[143] By 2050, 33% of the developed world’s population and almost 20% of the less developed world’s population will be over 60 years old.[144]

The growing number of people living to their 80s and 90s in the developed world has strained public welfare systems and has also resulted in increased incidence of diseases like cancer and dementia that were rarely seen in premodern times. When the United States Social Security program was created, persons older than 65 numbered only around 5% of the population and the average life expectancy of a 65 year old in 1936 was approximately 5 years, while in 2011 it could often range from 10–20 years. Other issues that can arise from an increasing population are growing demands for health care and an increase in demand for different types of services.[145]

Of the roughly 150,000 people who die each day across the globe, about two thirds—100,000 per day—die of age-related causes.[146] In industrialized nations, the proportion is much higher, reaching 90%.[146]

Psychosocial aspects

An elderly Somali woman.
An elderly Khmer woman.

According to Erik Erikson’s "Eight Stages of Life" theory, the human personality is developed in a series of eight stages that take place from the time of birth and continue on throughout an individual’s complete life. He characterises old age as a period of "Integrity vs. Despair", during which a person focuses on reflecting back on his life. Those who are unsuccessful during this phase will feel that their life has been wasted and will experience many regrets. The individual will be left with feelings of bitterness and despair. Those who feel proud of their accomplishments will feel a sense of integrity. Successfully completing this phase means looking back with few regrets and a general feeling of satisfaction. These individuals will attain wisdom, even when confronting death.[147][148][149] Coping is a very important skill needed in the aging process to move forward with life and not be 'stuck' in the past. The way a person adapts and copes, reflects his aging process on a psycho-social level.[150]

Newman & Newman proposed a ninth stage of life, Elderhood. Elderhood refers to those individuals who live past the life expectancy of their birth cohorts. There are two different types of people described in this stage of life. The "young old" are the healthy individuals who can function on their own without assistance and can complete their daily tasks independently. The "old old" are those who depend on specific services due to declining health or diseases. This period of life is characterized as a period of "immortality vs. extinction." Immortality is the belief that your life will go on past death, some examples are an afterlife or living on through one's family. Extinction refers to feeling as if life has no purpose.[151]

Theories of old age

Social theories, or concepts,[152] propose explanations for the distinctive relationships between old people and their societies.

One of the theories is the Disengagement Theory proposed in 1961. This theory proposes that in old age a mutual disengagement between people and their society occurs in anticipation of death. By becoming disengaged from work and family responsibilities, according to this concept, people are enabled to enjoy their old age without stress. This theory has been subjected to the criticism that old age disengagement is neither natural, inevitable, nor beneficial.[153] Furthermore, disengaging from social ties in old age is not across the board: unsatisfactory ties are dropped and satisfying ones kept.[154]

In opposition to the Disengagement Theory the Activity Theory of old age argues that disengagement in old age occurs not by desire, but by the barriers to social engagement imposed by society. This theory has been faulted for not factoring in psychological changes that occur in old age as shown by reduced activity even when available. It has also been found that happiness in old age is not proportional to activity.[155]

According to the Continuity Theory, in spite of the inevitable differences imposed by their old age, most people try to maintain continuity in personhood, activities, and relationships with their younger days.[155]

Socioemotional Selectivity Theory also depicts how people maintain continuity in old age. The focus of this theory is continuity sustained by social networks, albeit networks narrowed by choice and by circumstances. The choice is for more harmonious relationships. The circumstances are loss of relationships by death and distance.[156]

Life expectancy

Life expectancy by nation at birth in year 2011 ranged from 48 years to 82.[157]

In most parts of the world women live, on average, longer than men; even so, the disparities vary between 12 years in Russia to no difference or higher life expectancy for men in countries such as Zimbabwe and Uganda.[158]

The number of elderly persons worldwide began to surge in the second half of the 20th century. Up to that time (and still true in underdeveloped countries), five or less percent of the population was over 65. Few lived longer than their 70s and people who attained advanced age (i.e. their 80s) were rare enough to be a novelty and were revered as wise sages. The worldwide over 65 population in 1960 was one-third of the under 5 population. By 2013, the over 65 population had grown to equal the under 5 population. The over 65 population is projected to double the under five by 2050.[159]

Before the surge in the over 65 population, accidents and disease claimed many people before they could attain old age, and health problems in those over 65 meant a quick death in most cases. If a person lived to an advanced age, it was due to genetic factors and/or a relatively easy lifestyle, since diseases of old age could not be treated before the 20th century.[160]

Old age benefits

German chancellor Otto von Bismarck created the world's first comprehensive government social safety net in the 1880s, providing for old age pensions.[10]

In the United States of America, and the United Kingdom, 65 (UK 60 for women) was traditionally the age of retirement with full old age benefits.[161]

In 2003, the age at which a United States citizen became eligible for full Social Security benefits began to increase gradually, and will continue to do so until it reaches 67 in 2027. Full retirement age for Social Security benefits for people retiring in 2012 is age 66.[162] In the United Kingdom, the state pension age for men and women will rise to 66 in 2020 with further increases scheduled after that.”[163]

Originally, the purpose of old age pensions was to prevent elderly persons from being reduced to beggary, which is still common in some underdeveloped countries, but growing life expectancies and older populations have brought into question the model under which pension systems were designed.[164] The dominant perception of the American old age population changed from “needy” and “worthy” to “powerful” and “greedy,” old people getting more than their share of the nation's resources.[165] However, in 2011, using a Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), the old age American poverty rate was measured as 15.9%.[166]

Assistance: devices and personal

Old man at a nursing home in Norway.

In the USA in 2008, 11 million people aged 65+ lived alone: 5 million or 22% of ages 65–74, 4 million or 34% of ages 75–84, and 2 million or 41% of ages 85+. The 2007 gender breakdown for all people 65+ was men 19% and women 39%.[167]

Many new assistive devices made especially for the home have enabled more old people to care for themselves activities of daily living (ADL). Able Data[168] lists 40,000 assistive technology products in 20 categories.[169] Some examples of devices are a medical alert and safety system, shower seat (making it so the person does not get tired in the shower and fall), a bed cane (offering support to those with unsteadiness getting in and out of bed) and an ADL cuff (used with eating utensils for people with paralysis or hand weakness).[170]

A Swedish study found that at age 76, 46% of the subjects used assistive devices. When they reached age 86, 69% used them. The subjects were ambivalent regarding the use of the assistive devices: as “enablers” or as “disablers.”[171] People who view assistive devices as enabling greater independence accept and use them. Those who see them as symbols of disability reject them.[172]

Even with assistive devices as of 2006, 8½ million Americans needed personal assistance because of impaired basic activities of daily living (ADLs) required for personal care or impaired instrumental activities of daily living ( IADLs) required for independent living. Projections place this number at 21 million by 2030 when 40% of Americans over 70 will need assistance.[173] There are many options for such long term care to those who require it. There is the home care in which a family member, volunteer, or trained professional will aid the person in need and help with daily activities. Another option is community services which can provide the person with transportation, meal plans, or activities in senior centers. A third option is assisted living where 24 hour round the clock supervision is given with aid in eating, bathing, dressing, etc. A final option is a nursing home which provides professional nursing care.[174]

See also

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Preceded by Stages of human development
Old age
Succeeded by