Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood: Biosocial Development

Prejudice and Predictions

• Ageism– A prejudice in which people are categorized and judged

solely on the basis of their chronological age.– Considers people as part of a category and not as

individuals, can target people of any age.

• Elderspeak– A condescending way of speaking to older adults that

resembles baby talk, with short, simple sentences, exaggerated emphasis, repetition, and a slower rate and higher pitch than normal speech.

Page 2: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Believing the Stereotype

The Elderly’s View of Ageism

• Ageism becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

• Stereotype threat can be as debilitating for the aged as for other groups.

Page 3: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Gerontology and Geriatrics• Gerontology

– The multidisciplinary study of old age.• Geriatrics

– The medical specialty devoted to aging.

Page 4: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Demographic Shift

• Demographic shift– A shift in the proportions of the population of

various ages– Once there were 20 times more children than

older people

• Centenarians– People who’ve lived 100 years or more– The fastest-growing age group

Page 5: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Demographic ShiftDemographic pyramid

• A graphic representation of population as a series of stacked bars in which each age cohort is represented by one bar, with the youngest cohort at the bottom.

Page 6: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Demographic ShiftThree reasons for traditional pyramidal shape

1.Far more children were born than the replacement rate

2.Before modern sanitation and nutrition, many children died before age 5

3.Middle-aged people rarely survived adult diseases like cancer and heart attacks

• Fewer babies and more elders means countries’ demographic stacks become rectangles rather than triangles, as in Germany, Italy, and Japan.

Page 7: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Old, Older, and Oldest• Young-old (70%)

– Healthy, vigorous, financially secure older adults (those aged 60 to 75) who are well integrated into the lives of their families and communities.

• Old-old (20%)– Older adults (those aged 75 to 85) who suffer from

physical, mental, or social deficits.• Oldest-old (10%)

– Elderly adults (those over age 85) who are dependent on others for almost everything, requiring supportive services such as nursing-home care and hospital stays.

Page 8: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Primary and Secondary Aging

• Primary aging– The universal and irreversible physical changes

that occur to all living creatures as they grow older.

• Secondary aging– The specific physical illnesses or conditions that

become more common with aging but result from poor health habits, genetic vulnerability, and other influences that vary from person to person.

Page 9: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

High Blood Pressure and Cardiovascular Disease

The Cardiovascular Health Study • Participants: More than 5,000 people over age 65 in the U.S.

without coronary problems.• Six years later, some participants had developed heart disease.• The likelihood of CVD was strongly related to six risk factors (all

more common with age):• Diabetes• Smoking• Abdominal fat• High blood pressure• Lack of exercise• High cholesterol

Page 10: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

High Blood Pressure and Cardiovascular Disease

Cardiovascular disease• Disease that involves the heart and the

circulatory system

Page 11: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Facts about CVD• CVD is considered secondary aging because not everyone

develops it.• No single factor (including age, hypertension, inactivity, and

smoking) makes CVD inevitable.• The links among aging, risk, and CVD are undeniable.

– A 90-year-old is 1,000 times more likely to die of CVD than is a 30-year-old, even if both have identical genes, social contexts, and health habits

– Less than half those over age 65 have CVD, diabetes, or dementia but almost everyone has at least one of these three by age 90.

– Risk factors and diseases of the aged are not distributed randomly: If a person has one risk factor, it is likely that he or she has several.

Page 12: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Selective Optimization with Compensation

• Individual Compensation: Sleep– Older adults spend more time in bed, take

longer to fall asleep, wake up more often, and feel drowsy in the daytime more often.

• Social Compensation: Driving– Older adults drive more slowly, may not drive

at night or when there is bad weather and may give up driving altogether.

Page 13: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Compression of Morbidity

• A shortening of the time a person spends ill or infirm before death; accomplished by postponing illness.

• Due to improvements in lifestyle, medicine, and technological aids.

• North Americans who live to be 95 are likely to be independent almost all of those years

Page 14: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Effects of Falling

• With age, bones become more porous, losing calcium and strength. This can lead to osteoporosis where bones can be broken easily.

• Most common liability elders experience from falling is fear so they reduced their activity which caused them to become sicker.

Page 15: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Senses

Senescence is pervasive and inevitable • Obvious in appearance (skin gets wrinkled,

bodies change shape) and the senses.• Only 10% of people over age 65 see well

without glasses.• Taste, smell, touch, and hearing are also

impaired (e.g., by age 90, the average man is almost deaf, as are about half of the women).

Page 16: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Senses

Technology and Sensory Deficits: Technology can compensate for almost all sensory loss. Visual problems:

– Brighter lights and bifocals or two pairs of glasses are needed.

– Cataracts, glaucoma, and macular degeneration can be avoided or mitigated if diagnosed early.

– Elaborate visual aids (canes that sense when an object is near, infrared lenses, service animals, computers that “speak” written words) allow even the legally blind to be independent.

Page 17: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Senses

Page 18: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Senses

Auditory problems:• Small and sensitive hearing aids are available but

many people still hesitate to get aids.• Missing out on bits of conversation cuts down on

communication and precipitates many other social losses.

• Younger people tend to yell or use elderspeak, both of which are demeaning.

• Elderly people are less vulnerable to stereotype threat if they have positive interactions with the younger generations.

Page 19: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Society and Sensory Loss

A passive acceptance of sensory loss increases morbidity of all kinds.

Problems:• It is often difficult to individualize available

technology.• Ageism is inherent in the design of everything

from airplane seats to shoes.• Many disabilities would disappear if the

environment were better designed.

Page 20: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Theories of Aging

• Wear and Tear – A process by which the human body wears out

due to the passage of time and exposure to stressors.

• Genetic clock– A mechanism in the DNA of cells that regulates

the aging process by triggering hormonal changes and controlling cellular reproduction and repair.

Page 21: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

How Long Can Humans Live?Maximums and Average

• Maximum life span– The oldest possible age to which members of a species

can live, under ideal circumstances. For humans, that age is approximately 122 years.

• Average life expectancy– The number of years that the average person in a

particular population is likely to live.– In the U.S. today, average life expectancy at birth is

about 75 years for men and 81 years for women.– Dramatic variations from nation to nation

Page 22: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Cellular Aging

• Oxygen free radicals– Atoms of oxygen that have an unpaired

electron and which can, over time, cause cancer, diabetes, and arteriosclerosis

• Antioxidants– Chemical compounds that nullify the effects of

oxygen free radicals by forming a bond with their unattached oxygen electron.

Page 23: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The Immune System

• B Cells– Immune cells made in the bone marrow that

create antibodies for isolating and destroying bacteria and viruses.

• T Cells– Immune cells made in the thymus gland that

produce substances that attack infected cells in the body.

Page 24: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

Replication No More• Hayflick limit

– The number of times a human cell is capable of dividing into two new cells

• Telomeres– The ends of chromosomes in the cells

• Telomerase– Enzyme that increases the length of telomeres

• Calorie restriction– Slows down aging

Page 25: Chapter 23 – Late Adulthood:  Biosocial Development Prejudice and Predictions

The CentenariansLifestyles that promote old age:

• Diet: little meat or fat• Work: even the old do work• Family and community: well integrated into

family and community• Exercise and relaxation: most walk often,

nap, and socialize


Recommended