June 30, 2010

AZERBAIJAN: Longevity Museum Opens Where Nearly 2,000 Centenarians Live

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BAKU, Azerbaijan / TRENDS / News / June 30, 2010

By T.Hajiyev


Azerbaijan has more centenarians than most regional countries thanks to natural foods and genetics, experts stated this week.

Over 20 centenarians live in Azerbaijan's Lerik district. Lerik Museum of Longevity Director Dilara Fatullayeva told Trend that clean air and a stress-free lifestyle are key factors in longevity.

"These centenarians eat only natural foods, have little stress and live active lives. They are not aware of most events in the outside world. This keeps them free from stress," the director said.

Fatullayeva added that today environmental problems, unnatural foods, and hypertension shorten people's lives.

She stressed that the opening of the museum in Lerik is no coincidence. The city has earned international acclaim as the home to many centenarians. Fatullayeva said over 500 centenarians used to live in the district.

The museum has over 2,000 exhibits, including information and photographs. The museum also contains 40 photographs made by French photographer Frederic Lashop, which were exhibited in Paris under the title, "A Trip to Centenarian Country."

Fatullayeva said Lerik resident Shirali Muslimov lived 169 years, and his compatriot Mahmud Eyvazov lived until the age of 152.  According to the director, Eyvazov led an active lifestyle until his death and was constantly working.

These centenarians mostly did not leave their villages and their bond with nature was strong, Parliamentary Social Policy Committee Chairman Hadi Rajabli told Trend. "The gradually increasing distance from nature and technological development shortens people's lives," he said. However, he added that genetics also play a role in longevity.

Rajabli said the average lifespan in Azerbaijan has increased in recent years by eight months to 72.8. The average lifespan in Germany and Japan is 80, he said, adding that individuals should keep active and opt against a passive lifestyle to increase this figure.

Longevity is in the genes of the Azerbaijani people, Senior Scientist of Longevity at the Azerbaijani National Academy of Sciences (ANAS) Sevinj Huseynova told Trend. She said food, air and water are also important for longevity.

Meanwhile, she stressed that the authorities are studying the phenomenon of longevity in the country's northwestern and southern regions, as well as on the Absheron Peninsula. "People living in that region lead active lives," she said. "Very few suffer from hypertension. Many centenarians live in northwestern Azerbaijan." Ecology and life without stress are basic conditions for longevity, she added. Based on official statistics, Japan and Scandinavia occupy the top spots in terms of longevity, and offer special care to centenarians.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed an order in 2004 to provide certificates and special care to the country's centenarians.

Azerbaijan had 2,639 centenarians in 1989 - more women than men. Based on data provided by the State Statistics Committee, Azerbaijan boasted 2,307 centenarians in 2001. Today, there are less than 2,000.

© TREND News Agency

June 29, 2010

USA: Old age and the secret of well being

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NEW YORK, NY / Psychology Today / Charting the Depths / June 29, 2010

Reflections on the Science of Depression

by Jonathan Rottenberg, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of South Florida,
where he directs the Mood and Emotion Laboratory.

Listening to Geritol: Old age as an antidepressant

Our stereotypes of old age are of people in the midst of a physical and mental decline. Gone is the vigor of youth....It's all aches and pains on the way to the inevitable...


What, then, are we to make of a recent telephone survey of 340,000 people aged 18 to 85 conducted by the Gallup organization, in which older people scored much higher than younger people on global well being?

In the study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, each person who was called ranked overall life satisfaction on a 10-point scale, as well as answered questions about their recent experience of enjoyment, happiness, stress, worry, anger, and sadness.

Contra stereotypes, 85 year olds were more satisfied with life than 18 year olds or 50 year olds. Moreover, a similar pattern was found when recent emotional states were examined, with older persons less likely to report stress and worry than younger persons.

As we ponder our epidemic of depression, soon to become the world's leading cause of disability, does this large study hold potential wisdom?


Right now, the leading edge of the fight against depression is with pharmaceutical companies, who are spending billions on building a better molecule to fight depression. Another thrust aims to develop and improve psychologically-based treatments, such as cognitive behavioral therapy.

This study suggests the possibility of opening a new front in this war. Might we learn important clues about how not to become depressed by studying how it is that the elderly in this survey (and in other studies) manage to achieve such high levels of well-being at the end of life? This is in many ways a modest proposal. Currenty, only 11 percent of the budget of the National Institutes of Health is spent on research on the elderly.

Reference Arthur A. Stone, Joseph E. Schwartz, Joan E. Broderick, and Angus Deaton
 
A snapshot of the age distribution of psychological well-being in the United States
 
PNAS 2010 107 (22) 9985-9990;
published ahead of print May 17, 2010, doi:10.1073/pnas.1003744107
 
© Copyright 1991-2010 Sussex Publishers, LLC

USA: Elderly watch most TV, enjoy it less

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SAN DIEGO,  California / United Press International / Health News / June 29, 2010

It may be conventional wisdom that children and teens watch too much TV but U.S. researchers say the elderly watch more and it may hurt their health.

First author Colin A. Depp of the Stein Institute for Research on Aging and Rady School of Management at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, and colleagues used a diary-like assessment strategy that asked 3,092 study participants ages 15-98 to measure how they spent their time and describe their everyday activities.

"We found that older people spent a great deal more time watching TV than younger people did, yet they enjoyed the experience less," Depp said in a statement. "What the study underscored is that alternatives to television as entertainment are needed, especially in older adults."

Those age 65 and older reported spending three times more of their waking hours than younger adults watching TV. TV use among older adults -- unlike time spent socializing or physical exercise -- was related to lower life satisfaction.

"Our study indicates that older adults report lower levels of positive emotion while watching TV when compared to other activities -- which is not the case in younger adults," study co-author Dr. Dilip V. Jeste, director of the Stein Institute for Research on Aging, said.

The study is published online ahead of print in the August issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

© 2010 United Press International, Inc.

USA: Never too old to get fit

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SAVANNAH, Georgia / Savannah Morning News / Accent / June 29, 2010

By Dana Clark Felty

Betty, 85, and Bill Fish, 95, work out in a gym up to six days a week.

Gail Ewaldsen hears all kinds of excuses about why people aren't exercising.

Say "I'm too old," and Ewaldsen shakes her head and points to Betty and Bill Fish. "That's nothing. I've got a 95-year-old in here," said Ewaldsen, a certified personal trainer at the Islands YMCA.

Betty, 85, and Bill, 95, are among the oldest members of the Whitemarsh Island fitness club.

Bill and Betty Fish, 95 and 85, work out regularly.  (John Carrington/Savannah Morning News)

For the past eight years, the Talahi Island couple has spent four to six days a week working out there with weights, treadmills and stationary bikes. It's a sight that gives other members a boost, Ewaldsen said.

"Everyone knows them. Everyone is just in awe."

Betty says she and her husband are proof that you don't have to be a spandex-wearing muscle man or woman to enjoy a gym membership.

Physically, they're nothing exceptional, she said. Both retired decades ago, Bill from CSX Corporation and Betty from the U.S. Social Security Administration.

They've never been particularly athletic; just plain folks who like to stay active and enjoy life.

"Everyone tells us we're their inspiration," Betty said. "What we say to everyone is: 'We go today so we can come back tomorrow.' "

Gyms and seniors

The Fishes aren't the only older adults going to the gym these days. Seniors have become the fastest growing segment of the health club population, according to the International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association (IHRSA). Memberships among those ages 55 and older increased from 1.5 million in 1987 to 8.5 million in 2006.

The Islands Y put Ewaldsen in charge of senior adult programs in 2002. She leads fitness classes twice a week that focus on balance, flexibility and strengthening muscles.  She now works with about 20 to 30 participants per session. Two, not including Bill Fish, are in their early 90s. Another is turning 90 in a month.

"Some of them have a lot of health problems. Some of them have none," Ewaldsen said. "We're just trying to improve quality of life."

When a new senior joins the class, staff survey their goals and physical limitations to come up with a recommended workout routine, including weights and cardiovascular exercises. Each member is encouraged to start slow and gradually step up the challenges. For some, the goal is just to touch their toes or be able to get up off the floor.

In the nine years that Ewaldsen has led the classes, only two participants have lost their balance and needed an ambulance.

"There are things everyone can do," she said. "You just have to work around the weak parts."

More good years

Older adults can benefit from regular physical activity, even if basic activities such as walking or climbing stairs are difficult, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Over the last eight years, Bill has fallen several times at home. After completing physical therapy recommended by his doctor, he insisted on going back to the gym to speed his recovery.

"He's the type who wants to do more. More is always better," Betty said.

With Betty as his spotter, Bill rotates between five weight machines, working muscles in his legs, arms and back. Betty also uses the weights, and the two of them will take turns on the treadmill. The recumbent bicycle is Bill's favorite activity.

"Some days, he's not able to do more than 10 minutes," she said. "Other days, he can pedal for 25 minutes."

Bill still struggles with balance. He is legally blind and has nerve damage on the right side of his body. But the workouts have helped him recover from his some of his falls, Betty said. He can still get around using a walker, allowing the couple to continue doing things they enjoy, such as attending Lyons Club meetings, going out to eat and worshipping at First Baptist Church of the Islands.

"I think it's kept us active and on the go," Betty said.

Workouts for Seniors

If you're 65 years of age or older, are generally fit, and have no limiting health conditions, you can follow these weekly guidelines:

Option 1: Two-and-a-half hours of brisk walking and two or more sessions of muscle-strengthening activities that work all major muscle groups.

Option 2: 75 minutes of jogging or running and two or more sessions of muscle-strengthening activities that work all major muscle groups.

Option 3: An equivalent mix of walking and jogging and two or more sessions of muscle-strengthening activities that work all major muscle groups.

More time equals more health benefits. People with heart disease, arthritis, or diabetes should talk with their doctor about the physical activities that are right for them.

Source: Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity; National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

©2010.Savannah Morning News

INDIA: Dependence on sleeping pills rises among elderly, shows survey

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MUMBAI, Maharashtra / The Hindustan Times / Lifestyle / June 29, 2010

By Sai Raje

Falling asleep at night had never been a problem for Maniklal Shah (name changed). But after turning 50, Shah developed mild insomnia. Troubled at not feeling rested every morning, Shah approached his physician who prescribed a sleeping pill for a week. But the week-long prescription turned into a 20-year addiction.


Now at 70, Shah cannot do without his night pill. Over the years, his body got used to the prescribed dose and he increased the dose on his own.

Shah is among many older people in the city who are dependant on sleeping pills.

A recent survey conducted by Sion Hospital’s psychiatry department in two old age homes in the city showed that 33 per cent people in the 70 to 80 age group were habitual and long-time users of sleeping pills. (See box).

“Mild insomnia or sleeplessness was a common reason why some inmates had been prescribed sleeping pills for a short while, even before they came to the old age home. But some haven’t been able to kick the habit. I don’t prescribe sleeping pills to older people here as a rule,” said Dr Mallika Shetty, a general practitioner who is in charge of one of the old age homes where the survey was conducted.

“Sleeping pills shouldn’t be taken for more than a week at a stretch to cut the risk of addiction,” said Dr Nilesh Shah, head of the psychiatry department, Sion hospital.

But about 36 per cent of the habitual users in the survey had been taking the pills for five or more years. Of all users, only one had tried alternative methods for inducing sleep.

The body’s sleep requirement is known to reduce with old age. “An older person over the age of 60 may need only four to six hours of sleep every day,” said Dr Ashok Mahashur, who heads the sleep clinic at PD Hinduja Hospital, Mahim.

Sleeping pill dependence is a dangerous trend as it can have serious health implications. Using a higher dose (0.5 mg or more) over a long period can affect the brain’s cognition function.

“Studies have shown that there is a four- fold increase in incidences of suicide among elderly patients who take sleeping pills,” said Abhijna Chattopadhyay, a final year MBBS student who conducted the study for the department.

June 28, 2010

USA: Grandparents are getting younger, bringing earlier joys and challenges

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NOVATO, California / Marin Independent Journal / Lifestyles / June 28, 2010

By Paul Liberatore

Grandparents Cindy (left) and George (right) Rodericks with their daughter Kylie (middle) and their two grandchildren, Samantha and Matthew Moore, all get in a cuddle in the Roderick's residence in San Rafael. (IJ photo/Jeff Vendsel)

Instead of worrying about getting old, a growing number of baby boomers can claim that they're young in at least one respect - as grandparents.


In 1985, most grandparents were 65 and older. But, by the end of this year, boomers 45 to 64 are expected to make up the majority of the country's grandparent population, the youngest in history, according to Grandparents.com., whose slogan is, "It's great to be grand."

George and Cindy Rodericks of San Rafael would agree that it's great to be grand, but they weren't expecting to be grand quite so soon.

In March 2007, George was 41 and Cindy was 42 when their daughter, Kylie, gave birth to their grandson, Matthew, now 3, when she was still in high school.

"Cindy and I were excited, but it was a shock at first," he recalled. "We saw this as probably 10 years away."

Three-month-old Malia Poppe is held by her mother, Lizzy Poppe (from left), grandmother Marcelle Poppe and great-grandmother Thomasina Wilson at the Poppe s home in San Geronimo. More adults younger than 50, such as Marcelle Poppe, are becoming first-time grandparents. (IJ photo/Jeff Vendsel)

In 2008, their daughter gave them their second grandchild, Samantha, who will be 2 in October.

"People are always really surprised when they find out I'm their grandmother," Cindy Rodericks said. "When I'm out with the kids by myself, they think I'm their mom. It never even occurs to them that I might be their grandparent."

They're members of Gen X, but consider themselves honorary boomers.

"Because we're young grandparents, we don't feel like we're completely Gen X," he said. "It changes our perspective. We've got more in common with the baby boomers."

Boomer grandparents have higher incomes than grandparents of old. In 2009, they were in a position to spend $52 billion on their grandchildren, according to a study commissioned by Grandparents.com.

Far from retirement age, the Roderickses (he's now 43, she's 44) are on a par with working boomer grandparents financially as well. He's the city manager of Belvedere. She's an accountant for a pair of restaurants in San Anselmo.

"We're able to spoil them more because we aren't living on a retirement income," he said. "I find myself giving to them more than I probably did my own daughter. You just want to make everything wonderful for them. Being in the midst of our careers, though, makes time more challenging, the money less challenging."

Not only do young grandparents have more money these days, they still have the energy to keep up with their grandkids.

"It's been wonderful in that you get to experience the whole grandparent thing and you're not too old to sit down on the floor with the kids and enjoy them," Cindy Rodericks said. "In that way it's been great."

What hasn't been so great, she's quick to add, is that their grandchildren live with them. So does their daughter and her fiance, the children's father.

"Since they live with us, it's been more like, 'How do we get away from the noise and the chaos and let our daughter deal with her kids the way she wants to deal with them?" she said, noting that her daughter and her family will soon be moving into an apartment downstairs.

"I'm hoping that when they get moved there and they are separate from us that I'll be able to do things with them instead of going, 'Oh, God, I have to see my grandkids again," she said, chuckling.

Marcelle Poppe, who turns 49 in August, became a grandmother three months ago with the birth of Maia, her first granddaughter.

She is the latest in a line of young grandmothers in her family. Her grandmother and her mother were also younger than 50 when they became grandparents.

"It's amazing," she said. "It's so different to be a grandparent. I look at that little baby and think, 'She's a part of my baby.' It's a wonderful feeling. I love it."

Susie Owens of Grandparents.com says this new generation of grandparents are younger in interest and attitude than their grandparents.

"They're more likely to be playing Nintendo with their grandchildren than sitting in the corner knitting," she said.

Nintendo would be a little sedentary for Poppe.

"Being younger, I'll be able to go horseback riding with her when she's 5," she said. "If I were older, I don't think I'd be able to do that."

Like the Roderickses, she was in her early 20s when the first of her three sons, Eric, now 26, was born.

Eric suffered a stroke a little over a year ago, which convinced him that it was time for him and his wife, Lizzy, also 26, to become parents while they still can.

"When he was intensive care, he looked at her and said, 'We need to start our family,'" Poppe recalled. "It's a beautiful story. "It kind of makes me want to cry all over again."

Poppe, who celebrated her 30th wedding anniversary in April, lives in San Geronimo, not far from her son, his wife and new granddaughter.

She works for an insurance agent in San Anselmo, but takes Fridays off so she can spend more time with her family and its newest member, whom she calls a "little angel."

"There are people who have goals, and mine was to get married and have children, and the rest is cream on the top for me," she said. "It's great to be a younger grandparent, but any age to be a grandparent is pretty special."

Copyright © 2010. Marin Independent Journal.

SENIORS WORLD CHRONICLE'S FASCINATING FACE OF JUNE 28, 2010


Elderly Man from the Andes,
Ecuador
Source: shunya.net









Copyright protected photograph. Published to publicise valuable source of illustrations on Aging. For permission to use in any form, contact owners of intellectual property rights

USA: Elder Statesman, Robert Byrd, Dead at 92

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WASHINGTON / The Washington Post / Breaking News / June 28, 2010

By Joe Holley
Special to The Washington Post

Robert C. Byrd, 92, a conservative West Virginia Democrat who became the longest-serving member of Congress in history and used his masterful knowledge of the institution to shape the federal budget, protect the procedural rules of the Senate and, above all else, tend to the interests of his state, died at 3 a.m. Monday at Inova Fairfax Hospital, his office said.

Sen. Robert C. Byrd (1917-2010) served in the U.S. Congress longer than any member in history. The nine-term senator assumed office Jan. 3, 1959, after serving three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. Photo: Linda Davidson/Washington Post

Click here for full report

© 2010 The Washington Post Company

PAKISTAN: Kids born to moms under 25 more likely to live to 100, shows study

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KARACHI, Pakistan / The Nation / International / June 28, 2010

The age at which a mother gives birth has a major impact on how long her child will live, according to study result by American researchers available.

The chances of living to 100 and beyond nearly double for a child born to a woman before her 25th birthday, Leonid Gavrilov and Natalia Gavrilova from the University of Chicago's Center on Aging told the Chicago Actuarial Association meeting.

But the father's age is less important to longevity, according to their new study.

Using U.S. Census data, the Social Security Administration database, and genealogical records, Gavrilov and Gavrilova studied 198 centenarians born in the U.S. from 1890 to 1893 and their family histories to try to identify possible predictors of longevity.

In a previous study, Gavrilov and Gavrilova's team identified birth order as a possible predictor of an exceptionally long life. They observed that first-born children, especially daughters, are much more likely to live to age 100.

But their latest study suggested that it is the young age of the mother, rather than birth order, which is key to longevity.

The finding "may have important social implications," Gavrilov added in a statement, "because many women postpone their childbearing to later ages because of career demands."

© Copyright 2004 - Nawaiwaqt Group of News Papers

INDIA: Age is just a number for these sculptors

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MUMBAI, Maharashtra / Daily News & Analysis / Lifestyle / Report / June 28, 2010

By Joanna Lobo

Ninety-year-old Joseph Hopkins is a busy man. Hunched over a bench that has wood, bamboo and coconut shavings scattered over it, Hopkins scrapes and polishes all of it, his face writ with concentration. His age does not stop him from sculpting the most exquisite wood and coconut craft. Hopkins’ workshop is a small shed at the Little Sisters of the Poor home for aged in Andheri.

The world observed Elder Abuse Awareness Day on June 15 with calls for prevention of suffering and distress of the elderly. But, living in an old-age home does not always mean that these elderly people are suffering; a truth that Hopkins pays heed to, daily. “I can work till I get tired, because I love what I do,” he says, adding that the last four days, his ill-health has kept him away from his work. Hopkins’s handiwork — funny monkey faces, delicate butterflies, tiny cribs and tinkling wind chimes to more utilitarian mugs and kettles with lids — has found favour with visitors at the home.

His workshop, which lies in the middle of the old-age home’s garden, was specially built for him. A single room tool shed, it is strewn with wood shavings, coconut husks, polishing and cutting machines, handiwork in various stages of completion, and a framed picture of Hopkins and his wife at their wedding. “I spend two to three hours here every morning and sometimes evenings too, if there are many orders,” says Hopkins.

Hopkins started out alone, but today takes help from his friend, Rolim Lobo, who he affectionately calls Lobo. The 84-year-old Lobo joined the old-age home in 2009 and just one look at the workshop was all it took to pique his interest.

Lobo helps out with odd jobs like carving, polishing the finished products, scraping the coconut shells and so on. “We sometimes get very engrossed in our work, forgetting the time. When you are doing something you love, time does not matter,” says Lobo. And whilst Hopkins dedicates his free timeto creating new handiwork, Lobo divides his free time between painting and singing with the home’s choir.

The duo even has one of their masterpieces displayed at the reception of the old-age home: a plywood replica of the Titanic, approximately a foot in length. Hopkins has a passion for making locomotives and engines.

“The home provides us with everything: from space to materials to manpower if needed. We just give them a shape,” says Lobo.

Orders are sent through Mother Irene, the superior who heads the gents section of the home. There is no deadline and only small orders are accepted. “We just want to keep them busy so that they forget their worries and keep good heath,” says Sr Agnes, one of the nuns at the home.

For Hopkins and Lobo, it’s the love of giving a new life to an inanimate object which keeps them going, every day.

©2010 Diligent Media Corporation Ltd.

June 27, 2010

USA: Better with age: Happiness grows after 50, study finds

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LACONIA, New Hampshire  / Laconia Citizen / June 27, 2010

By GEOFF CUNNINGHAM Jr.
 
PORTSMOUTH — Joanne Dodge, 74, of Dover, is long past worrying about her body image and is loving life despite the health setbacks that often come with age.

"I've learned to become more comfortable with myself, and I don't feel like the whole world is looking at me," Dodge said.

A recent study by New York's Stony Brook University of people's mindsets at different ages suggests Dodge isn't the only person who has been worrying a lot less as they get older.

The study followed a Gallup Healthways poll telephone survey undertaken in 2008 that sought, through a series of questions, to gauge the differing levels of stress and well-being reported by people between the ages of 18 to 85.

Upward of 340,000 individuals nationwide were asked about their age, sex, personal finances and health with the study differentiating an overall feeling of "global well-being" versus their more "hedonic" or immediate feelings — a determiner focusing on how a person felt yesterday with regard to emotions ranging from happiness to worry.

Results of the polling analyzed through a study titled "A snapshot of the age distribution of psychological well being in the U.S.," showed that after an individual reaches 50 years old, life perceptions are more positive and feelings of worry or stress begin to decline.

The research findings confirm earlier reports that between the ages of 18 and 50, perceptions of global well-being tend to decline with age, while after age 50, perceptions become more positive as people grow older, thus creating a U-shaped curve when ratings are plotted by age.

Arthur Stone, the lead author of the NYU study, said results focusing on people's more immediate feelings showed slightly different results.

The hedonic measure showed stress was at its highest for those in their early 20s, with 52 percent of people in that age group reporting feelings of anxiety. He said that number diminished to about 18 percent for those in their late 70s.

"We found that trickled downward in a linear way through (those in their) late 70s," Stone said.

Similar findings showed — beginning at age 50 — individuals reported progressively less worry on a day-to-day basis.

Stone said one thing that is perplexing is that the analysis showed changes in perception of well-being are not associated with factors like having a partner, having children at home, or employment status.

"The big question," Stone said, "is what's going on ... why is stuff seeming to get better at age 50?"

Stone speculated that the finding might result from younger adults being in a station in life where they are still trying to prove themselves from both an employment and personal standpoint as they focus on a still uncertain future.

He said the study might suggest that once people reach age 50 they are able to focus on the now and essentially have the time to "stop and smell the flowers."

"They are saying they know where they are and 'I've achieved what I want to achieve,'" Stone said.

Dodge — an avid kayaker, grandmother and active member of the "Senior Moments" acting troupe — said she certainly has a different perspective from when she was a younger woman trying to establish herself.

She said one thing that has changed is that she is far less worried about body image.

"I don't lose a lot of extra sleep over a couple extra pounds. I've accepted that what is sagging is going to sag," Dodge said with a laugh.

Dodge said her current place in life allows her to sit down and relax.

"I'm enjoying life a lot," she said.

The Dover woman has survived three bouts with breast cancer and recently had a cataract removed.

She said old age brings health concerns, but she doesn't let those bring her down.

"I can only feel sorry for myself for a day or so," Dodge said.

Experts in the field say Dodge is among those who have reached a point where they experience less anxiety as a result of life experiences.

John Sargent — a Portsmouth-based clinical mental health counselor and career coach — said based on his dealings with clients of different age groups, he isn't surprised by the findings.

"I think the 50 year old may have adjusted to what their future looks like," said Sargent — a former head of operations for an S&P 500 company.

He noted that individuals in their 50s have usually passed a "mid-life crisis" point that forced them to make "significant course corrections" that helped them become better adjusted and more content.

"If you are particularly in the corporate world, you know your future by age 40 and whether you're going to be in that corner office," Sargent said.

The career coach said anxiety levels are usually much higher for younger adults as they climb corporate ladders and deal with relationships that have yet to be cemented by marriage.

"The verdict hasn't been decided yet," Sargent said of that stage of life.

Sargent suggested that those raising children are likely the most stressed right now as a result of the economy.

Lucille Karatzas — the director of Elder Services at Seacoast Mental Health — said she believes the study shows the impact perspective can have on people's judgment of their own well-being.

Karatzas — a clinical social worker who deals largely with individuals 60 and older — noted people seem to become more adjusted and better equipped to handle what life throws at them as a result of their larger collection of past experiences.

"That population has for the most part figured out the balance of work and life and are probably moving toward thinking about quality of life issues," she said.

One thing that should be noted is that improvements in medicine and an emphasis on preventive health care have allowed the senior population to enjoy improved vision, hearing and nutrition, she said.

"People are looking at getting older as something to look forward to and not to dread," she said.

She said older adults are in a position in life where they can focus on their happiness rather than earning money, finding a partner, supporting a family and overall whether they will be successful at any of those things.

Karatzas is 64 and said her perspective on well-being on a day-to-day basis is certainly different from what it would have been if someone asked her about it when she was in her 20s or 30s.

She noted that younger adults are less equipped to process problems like the struggling stock market than older individuals who have seen the ups and downs of the economy.

"You feel less stressed because you have the experience and longevity to know it will pass," Karatzas said.

Joanne Dodge, 74, of Dover, said she is at a point in life where she is still active, but more relaxed. A recent study shows levels of worry diminish after individuals turn 50.

Copyright © 2010 Geo. J. Foster Company.

INDIA: French couple to be first residents at old age home for gays at Rajpipla

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VADODARA, Gujarat / The Times of India / June 27, 2010

By Darshana Chaturvedi, Times News Network

A couple from France will be the first residents of the country's first old age home for gays being constructed in Rajpipla on the banks of Narmada by gay prince and scion of Rajpipla's royal family, Manvendra Singh Gohil.

Moreover, this French couple will not just be mere residents, but are coming with plans to provide employment to their fellow occupants. The couple will cultivate spirulina (an algae fast becoming a popular health drug ingredient) near the home. With Gohil, they have in fact sowed the seed of this initiative by registering a company to run the project professionally but for a noble cause.

Bruno Choquet Despicq and Simon Evan Wrigley are in their early 50s and had met Gohil a few years ago. "Bruno wanted to start a project in India to grow spirulina and he was assured help by someone in Puducherry. But, things did not go as planned. That's when he came to meet me in Mumbai after reading about me in a popular French magazine. I invited him to Rajpipla and he instantly liked the place," shared Gohil.

In fact, the couple was expected to arrive last year, but the economic slowdown shelved their plans. "I will be providing the land to them near the old age home. They will take care of the rest by cultivating spirulina and turning it into medicine. Spirulina-based medicines help in boosting the immunity and is good for HIV positive people. "Part of the medicines will be exported to France and the rest will be given to me, which I will give to groups working with HIV positive people in India," added Gohil.

Gohil got interested in this project as it would provide gainful employment to other residents. "Both residents and caretakers will get a chance to earn while their stay at the home. This will keep them occupied and prevent them from depression traps," said Gohil, who is the first Asian to initiate a project to deal with issues faced by old gay men.

Gohil is also getting global support for the old age home with agencies in Australia and France assuring all help. "I have been invited for a fund raising event in France in November. Since the project is close to Narmada River, we will be making it eco-friendly place using solar, wind and water energy. I also plan to add a community hall for recreational activities for the residents," he said.

Copyright © 2010 Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

ECUADOR: Sleepy town may hold secrets to a long life

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BOSTON, Massachusetts / The Boston Globe / Travel / June 27, 2010

A fabled valley

In the shadow of the Andes, a sleepy town known for its centenarians may hold the secrets to a long life

By Bella English, Globe Staff

VILCABAMBA, Ecuador — I’ve barely stepped off the plane when the stories about the Valle de Longevidad — Valley of Longevity — start. My cabdriver asks what I’m doing in this small town in southern Ecuador, and I tell him I’m in search of the legendary old people of Vilcabamba. The cabbie brightens. “My great-great uncle lived to be 127 years old,’’ he says. “His name was Miguel Carpio.’’

Everyone in Vilcabamba knew Carpio. And it seems like half the town is related to him. Some say he was 127. Some say 130. Some say he wasn’t a day over 110.

I’ve come here to ferret out truth from myth: Does this off-the-beaten-path place really have some sort of magic charm, where centenarians are the norm? Or is it mostly legend, started a generation ago by an article in National Geographic magazine and picked up by locals eager to promote tourism?

In the early 1970s Dr. Alexander Leaf visited three places known for longevity, all remote and mountainous: a village in Kashmir, another in the Russian Caucasus, and Vilcabamba. Leaf, then a professor at Harvard and chief of medical services at Massachusetts General Hospital, wrote that in 1971, Vilcabamba, with a population of 819, had nine people older than 100. In comparison, the United States had three centenarians per 100,000 people.

According to Leaf, a doctor in Quito had studied the diets of the elderly in Vilcabamba and concluded that they took in about 1,200 calories a day, low in fat and cholesterol, which would minimize heart disease. In addition, physical activity required by living in a high altitude improved their cardiopulmonary function.

And then there was the genetic component. Many of the uber-elderly Leaf spoke to had a long-lived sibling or parent. In an isolated village where many are interrelated, Leaf speculated that a few people lacking “bad genes’’ that increase morbidity might have been the source of the longevity.

Nearly 40 years later, Vilcabamba has grown to 5,000 inhabitants. It was connected to the larger world 30 years ago by a winding, two-lane highway. But it is still a sleepy town with a square anchored by the requisite church. In a nod to tourism, some restaurants, spas, and excursion agencies have sprung up on the surrounding streets. There are outfitters who lead hikes or horseback rides into the nearby Podocarpus National Park with its 350,000 acres, lakes, waterfalls and streams, and abundant plant and animal life.

At 5,000 feet, Vilcabamba lies in the shadow of the Andes with views of lush valleys and distant purple slopes. With an average temperature of 78 degrees, the town enjoys eternal spring. Everything grows here: orange, lemon, and lime groves, sugar cane, banana trees, and flowers of all hues.

But what about the old folks?

My cabbie, Fabricio Peralta, is eager to help me on my mission. “It’s the water, the air, the food they grow,’’ he offers. Vilcabamba, he boasts, was organic before anyone knew what that meant. The old-timers have always eaten what they grow, nothing out of a can or box, and no pesticides.

“The grandmas make this horchata tea with eight or 10 medicinal herbs they grow,’’ says Peralta. “They drink this kind of tea every morning.’’

The alleged fountain of youth could indeed be something in the drinking water. Highly mineralized, from pristine mountain springs, the water is bottled and sold in stores. Labels on the Vilcagua spring water bear the likeness of a robust elderly man. The same sort of logo adorns the sides of the town’s taxis.

Judy Meumunier moved here a year ago from Indianapolis after reading about the town on the Internet. “It’s been the best year of my life,’’ says the retired real estate broker. “The weather, the scenery, the people — I just love it all.’’

Does she see a lot of old people? “Yes, they’re pretty amazing. My cabdriver told me his relative lived to be 127.’’

Hmmm. Sounds familiar. My cabbie directs me to the town park, where I find Nesto Carpio, son of the late, legendary Miguel, “who spent only one night in 127 years in the hospital, his last night on earth.’’

But Nesto is a youthful 92 and only retired a year ago from farming beans, coffee, and maize. He wears thick glasses but says he feels fine and is on no medications. “It’s the food, the good water, and air,’’ he adds.

At the local hospital, Dr. Juan Espinoza says there’s something to that. “The old people, they eat natural food that they grow, they walk a lot, they work. They’re strong.’’ And, he says, “They’re active sexually.’’

Another Carpio — Victor, the hospital pharmacist — has published a magazine devoted to the super-elderly of Vilcabamba. With about a dozen subjects, most of them hovering around 100, Carpio writes that though they may look old they are strong and agile, many of them still working.

He tells me about Vincente Pilco Torres, who will be 110 — allegedly — in August, and says he’s the town’s oldest resident. His only problem? He’s hard of hearing.

I can’t locate Torres, but I find Manuel Picoita, allegedly 105, sitting on the steps of a disheveled house shared by four generations. The extended family, which honors the elderly, is another reason given for the longevity. A nursing home would be unheard of.

Picoita seems happy. Pointing to his eyes and then his ears, he says: “I can see, I can hear.’’ From age 12, he worked in the fields, from 6 a.m. until 6 p.m. He still works, but “a little slower.’’ He laughs, revealing few teeth. “I’d like to live 20 years more.’’

There are four generations living in the home of Lucila Victorios Guerrero, who is said to be 104: Guerrero, her daughter, granddaughter, and great-grandson. Though her hearing is perfect, her eyes are not, and she walks with a cane. For decades, she worked as a seamstress. She gets up daily at 4 a.m. and starts breakfast for the family. She drinks coffee “to give me strength’’ and goes to church every Sunday.

There’s another theory about the “longevos’’: Maybe they are lying about their age. They don’t have driver’s licenses or birth certificates. (But there’s one glitch in this hypothesis: since when do women lie to make themselves older?)

In my strolls around town, I don’t see an abundance of old people. Peralta often has tourists like me ask him where all the old folks are. “I tell them they’re out in the fields working, not lazy like you.’’

Still, I’m not convinced that there are more centenarians in Vilcabamba than elsewhere. But as word of the valley’s fabled longevity has spread, visitors have flocked here.

“There’s still a lot of healthy longevity here,’’ says Brian O’Leary, a former MIT-educated astronaut and author who moved to Vilcabamba with his artist wife six years ago. “However, the gringo ‘invasion’ does offer more temptations such as processed food that is making the tradition shrink.’’

Several of the “viejos’’ have died in recent years, and the younger generations are unlikely to live as long, says Espinoza, who is seeing more diabetes and heart disease.

Richard Fontes, a Brazil native who moved to the United States as a teenager, has lived in Vilcabamba for nearly 20 years. He came to town, commissioned by a Miami doctor to look into “this longevity thing.’’ When he arrived, there were few cars; people tied horses or donkeys to posts in town.

“I wanted to know about the food they eat, the water they drink, are they sexually active, how do they take care of themselves when they’re sick?’’ says Fontes.

He concluded that before the highway was built, in 1982, there was a high percentage of centenarians. “You had a small valley with all the natural elements, a small gene pool with longevity genes in there.’’

Each family, he says, had its own garden and grew herbs for horchata tea. “It’s a blood cleanser, a kidney cleanser. It’s medicinal and they drank it all the time. Now, you have Coke, you have Fanta, and alcohol is rampant.’’

In addition, the last five years have brought construction of hotels, more cars, and microwave towers for cellphones, he says. Fontes ran a health food store for awhile, but “nobody was interested.’’

“Everyone’s looking for a magic bullet,’’ he says, “but there ain’t no magic bullet.’’

Fontes, who nevertheless loves Vilcabamba, concludes: “They ought to just sell it for what it is, a great place to live, with great water and a great climate. And you can get a great house for $70,000.’’

When I get back from Ecuador, I decide to see if Leaf, who wrote the original National Geographic story, is available for comment. He is. At 90, he still goes to the office every afternoon to research the effects of fish oil and fatty acids on longevity.

So, how does he feel about the longevos 40 years later? “Grossly exaggerated,’’ he now says. “None of them were nearly as old as they claimed. They do grow old and remain active, but I’m 90 and I’m still active, too.’’

Still, I’m drinking lots of horchata tea I bought in Vilcabamba. You never know.

Bella English 
E-Mail: english@globe.com

© Copyright 2010 Globe Newspaper Company.
.............................................................................

Seniors World Chronicle adds:

TIME Magazine,  March 27, 1978 carried an article that declared:

Science: High Hoax

Those not-so-old Ecuadorians

Here is an extract from that article:

At a National Institutes of Health workshop in Bethesda, Md., Alexander Leaf, Harvard professor of clinical medicine, whose 1973 National Geographic article and 1975 book Youth in Old Age did much to advance the legend of Vilcabamba's oldsters, ruefully said that it was apparently all a hoax. Vilcabamba ("Sacred Valley" in the Inca tongue), it now appears, has no more senior citizens per capita than other Andean towns. In fact, the revelations of such gerontological high jinks are remarkably similar to earlier reports from Soviet scientists that some of their old folks may not be as ancient as they claim.

Leaf explained that his suspicions were aroused when a man who had given his age as 121 when he interviewed him in 1970 claimed to be 132 only four years later. Leafs doubts were subsequently confirmed by two more scientists.

© 2010 Time Inc.

June 26, 2010

CHINA: Elderly have fewer kids to see to their care

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SACRAMENTO, California / The Sacramento Bee / World News

By Phenola Lawrence, McClatchy Newspapers

SHANGHAI – When Qing Zhuren comes to work every day as the manager of the Shanghai Fahua Home for the Aged, he confronts a scene that he once could barely imagine.

The tiny rooms off a chilly hallway that smells of cleaning solvents are all full. Three to four residents wrapped in Hello Kitty blankets lie in touching twin beds. There's enough space for only one person to enter at a time.

Decades ago, the idea that China's eldest residents would be put in the care of non-family members was laughable – impossible, Qing said. In China's tradition-ruled society, parents and grandparents have always depended on their children, grandchildren or in-laws to care for them in their old age.

However, the full rooms at the Fahua Home for the Aged here are proof of a demographic change that's quietly making itself felt throughout this country of 1.3 billion.

Largely due to government policies, birthrates have been falling for the past few decades. At the same time, the explosion of China's middle class has produced millions of upwardly mobile, two-career families that are more than willing to move about the country or even abroad for their jobs.

Xu Anqi, a professor and deputy director of the Center of Family Research at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said China's birthrate has been falling for 16 years. Though it's hard to pinpoint the cause, many point to population-control policies that date back to the days when China was barely able to feed itself.

In the 1950s and 1960s, the government tried promoting contraception and then encouraged later marriages and longer waits between children. In 1979, China grew desperate and resorted to what's known today as the One-Child Policy. Under this policy, urban couples are limited to one child, while farmers and rural couples are limited to two.

The policy worked. From 1960 to 1980, China's fertility rate fell from six children per woman to two – the most rapid decline ever recorded.

It was a win for the government, but many Chinese consider it the loss of a tradition.

"Families traditionally used to having many siblings around to take care of older residents suddenly find themselves faced with a problem," Xu Anqi said. "All the pressure is on one child to take care of his parent and grandparents and spouse's parents. It's too much for just one person."

Researchers have dubbed it the "1-2-4 problem" – one child taking care of two parents and four grandparents.

The situation has become so pressing that the Chinese government is examining alternatives, including more elder care centers such as Qing's.

"A nursing home is a very good option," Qing said. "The kids, when they get older, they don't have enough time. The adults … they don't want to be a bother. It's not a breakdown of the tradition; we still are going to take care of our families. The method, though, has changed. We are adapting."

Part of the process of adapting is ensuring that traditional values are preserved.

For example, before a person is accepted to the Fahua Home for the Aged, relatives must promise to visit and call. In the five years that Qing has worked at the home, he can't remember anyone who hasn't had visitors.

Photo by Phenola Lawrence/McClatchy Newspapers

Although researchers admit that the one-child policy isn't making the current situation any better, they expect the policy to remain in effect, at least for now.

Zhang Weiqing, the State Population and Family Planning Commission minister, told the country's official English-language newspaper, the China Daily, in 2008 that the nation won't make any drastic changes to the one-child policy for at least another decade. He added that the government was aware of the problem and was aiming to help the country deal with the situation.

Xu Anqi thinks that isn't enough.

"It's a serious problem that the government has to address," she said. "Our nursing homes are crowded, and our families are distraught. They have been making progress, but I fear it's not fast enough."

Researchers estimate that by 2030, the number of people age 65 and older in China will reach 167 million, roughly half of the entire U.S. population.

That scares Qing. Already overworked and overbooked, there's only so much more he says he can do.

"It's a problem that I never thought we would encounter," he said.

Phenola Lawrence, a graduate of Penn State University, reported this story from Shanghai for a class in international journalism.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee.

NEW ZEALAND: Homeless Josie May is Auntie Ethel

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand / The Dominion Post / National / June 26, 2010

By MICHAEL FIELD - The Dominion Post

Hawaii's "Josie May", a homeless old woman who cannot remember her name and who has lived rough around Honolulu for a decade, is coming home to New Zealand. But she will return not as a penniless vagrant.


Ethel Helmbright, believed to be about 80, is the last of a once-treasured line of kuia, the granddaughter of a chief who signed the Treaty of Waitangi and the customary holder of a big piece of Tuhoe land in Bay of Plenty.

Until her whanau saw her picture on Stuff.co.nz, they thought she had died years ago.

"One of our lost aunties, what an amazing story," said nephew Peter Helmbright in Opotiki.

"I was telling the young people in Auckland to jump on the plane and go and get her."

Mr Helmbright said his aunt's great-grandfather, Ahi Waru, signed a copy of the Treaty at Te Kaha. Ethel was last of a line of chiefs who had customary title over land – and still held that, he said. "The last time we saw Auntie Ethel was ... 20 years ago."

Niece Colleen Helmbright, of Kawerau, recalled her aunt announcing she was going to Alaska.

She spent yesterday gathering the information to get Ethel home.


"We thought she had frozen in the ice in Alaska," she said.

The family had a house south of Opotiki, where she would be looked after.

"Josie May" has been living in Honolulu, and spent almost a year in hospital in the city.

Because she was suffering the onset of dementia, the only clue to her identity was a New Zealand accent.

The state appointed a public guardian, Peter Petticord, and on Wednesday he issued pictures of her in an effort to get information.

The Helmbright family had no trouble recognising her. Ethel's parents were Reginald Helmbright, a German, and Parekohai Waiariki, who later separated.

In Honolulu, "Josie May" would often talk of World War II. She had been deeply affected when her closest brother left the family to join the 28th Maori Battalion.

He survived, with a decoration for an action in Italy in which he single-handedly attacked three German machinegun posts.

As an adult, Ethel roamed about New Zealand. She has a daughter who is still alive.

At one point Ethel was jailed for theft and was fingerprinted. Authorities are now looking for those prints.

© 2010 Fairfax New Zealand Limited

INDIA: Over 100 Old Age Homes, But State Capital Does Not Care For The Old

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HYDERABAD, Andhra Pradesh / The Times of India / June 26, 2010

City second in ill-treating senior citizens, says report

HYDERABAD city doesn't seem to respect its elderly. In a nation-wide survey conducted by HelpAge India, Hyderabad finds itself at a disturbing second rank for physical abuse of senior citizens. It was found that 21.7 per cent of Hyderabad's senior citizens face abuse at least once in a lifetime.

The survey was conducted in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bangalore, Bhopal, Patna, Kolkata and Hyderabad. Almost 1,000 senior citizens over the age of 60 years participated in the poll with 102 from Hyderabad alone.

According to the report, one-fifth of the city's elderly were unaware of what constituted abuse but the other respondents did note disrespect from children, lack of financial support, neglect and physical beating as the forms of abuse they had faced.

S Dass, joint director, HelpAge India, said that depriving parents of basic necessities like food, clothing and shelter fall under emotional abuse, and was the highest in Hyderabad compared to other cities. The report finds that 33 per cent of the elderly who registered police complaints to report abuse said nothing came out of it.

Lack of awareness about NGOs and other senior citizens' welfare association services acts as an obstacle from getting help at the right time. The report finds that level of awareness is the lowest in Hyderabad. Only 22 per cent of the people were found to know about the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007.

There are more than 100 old age homes and 129 senior citizen welfare associations in the city but financial limitations, lack of awareness and the social pressure of living with the family prevent the elderly from using these services.

Copyright © 2010 Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

June 25, 2010

NEW ZEALAND: No key to longevity, birthday girl says

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AUCKLAND, New Zealand / North Shore Times / June 25, 2010

Felicity Reid - North Shore Times

INDEPENDENT: Marjory Allison of Browns Bay celebrates her 100th birthday this month. Ben Watson


Music is in the blood for centenarian Marjory Allison. The Browns Bay singer and pianist was a founding member of two local singing groups and it was only last year that she decided to give her vocal chords a bit of a rest.


"Any music thing going I would be a member of," she says.

The daughter of a flautist and pianist, Mrs Allison is one of seven children.

Her introduction to choir singing came when her father conducted a children's Christmas choir.

The 100-year-old is sure of her favourite music.

"Nostalgic with a bit of classical mixed in – not pop."

She says there is no key to her longevity. "It is the luck of the game".

However, those around her suggest her healthy diet, regular eating patterns and the occasional glass of whisky play a part.

She still lives independently and cooks most of her own meals, and even does some home baking for guests.

Mrs Allison says the biggest changes over the past 100 years have been in transport and communications.

She ran a couple of North Shore businesses with her sister so she got her driver's licence at age 27 in 1937, which was unusual at the time.

Mrs Allison drove a big V8 Ford to do deliveries for their wedding catering business. Before that she worked at a factory in downtown Auckland and caught the double-decker ferry to work each day for 10 years.

Mrs Allison, who married for the first time when she was 73, marked her 90th birthday when she chronicled her life in a book titled The Adkins Family Settle in New Zealand.

Family and friends helped celebrate her latest milestone with a gathering last week.

© 2010 Fairfax New Zealand Limited

NEW ZEALAND: Surgeons stay working into old age

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AUCKLAND / The New Zealand Herald / Employment / June 25, 2010

By Martin Johnston

More than 10 per cent of New Zealand surgeons are practising into old age - some to beyond 70 - partly because of a lack of younger replacements.


About 11 per cent are over 65, a survey by the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons shows - a similar rate to Australia. But 4 per cent are over 70 in New Zealand, significantly higher than Australia's 1.1 per cent. Photo: Getty

Their competence is not in question - all doctors must satisfy the Medical Council that they are fit to practise - but practising into old age could suggest shortages in the workforce, despite a 15 per cent increase in the number of practising surgeons in New Zealand since 2005.

In both countries, more than 20 per cent of public hospital surgeons rostered for after-hours on-call duties to care for acutely sick or injured patients said they intended to retire within five years.

"The ageing workforce is interesting," the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists' executive director, Ian Powell, said yesterday. "What that means to me is that we are still not retaining enough at the younger end and that's putting more pressure on those at the older end to stay longer."

He expected the trend would be more pronounced in other specialties, such as paediatrics and psychiatry, where there were fewer openings for higher-paid private practice.

The association's own research has found that half New Zealand registrars in their final year of training leave to take up their first specialist position overseas.

"The most common reason for leaving, according to the training directors, was for better salaries and conditions," Mr Powell said.

The college's NZ national board chairman, John Kyngdon, a Bay of Plenty and Gisborne surgeon, said the retirement intentions of public hospital on-call surgeons were a greater concern than surgeons aged over 70. He said the number of state-funded surgical training places needed to rise and the training programmes needed to be extended to small public hospitals and to private hospitals.

The college has previously stated its support for a trial, to be run at Middlemore Hospital's surgery department, of the position of "physician assistant".

This is a new role for New Zealand, although it is well established overseas, and will involve surgeons delegating some tasks to the assistants, freeing them to do more clinical work and training of junior doctors.

Health Workforce NZ, a Health Ministry committee, is developing schemes to try to keep registrars in New Zealand.

SURGICAL SNAPSHOT
* 81 per cent of Royal Australasian College of Surgeons' 4881 fellows completed the survey in 2009.
* 7.5 per cent of New Zealand surgeons are 65-69.
* 666 active surgeons in New Zealand .
* 1 for every 6000 people.
* 1 per 7000 in 2005.
* 4 per cent are over 70.
* 28.5 per cent said junior medical staff cover barely adequate.
* 6.2 per cent called it dangerously inadequate.
* 54.9 per cent said more surgeons needed in public sector.


UK: Wisdom 'is the brain slowing down in old age'

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LONDON, England / The Telegraph / Lifestyle / Health News / June 25, 2010

Wisdom comes from the brain slowing down in old age making elderly people less impulsive and driven by emotion, researchers say.


By Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor

Researchers have used brain scans to discover the key to wisdom in old age. Photo: Christine Boyd
American researchers carried out a series of studies on 3,000 people aged between 60 and 100 to find out what happens to the brain as it ages.


They discovered that elderly people can still learn new abilities but their brains are less dependent on 'feel good' hormones making them appear less driven by emotion and impulsivity.

This in essence, is wisdom, the Royal College of Psychiatrists Congress in Edinburgh was told.


Professor Dilip Jeste of the University of California, San Diego, said: "The fact that older people are slower to respond than younger people is widely seen as a disadvantage. But that's not always the case.

"The elderly brain is less dopamine-dependent, making people less impulsive and controlled by emotion. Older people also less likely to respond thoughtlessly to negative emotional stimuli because their brains have slowed down compared to younger people. This, in fact is what we call wisdom.

"MRI scans have also identified the four regions of the brain that contribute to wisdom, with older people demonstrating a higher level of activity between these regions than younger people."

Scans of elderly people's brains also found that their ability to learn new skills was undiminished despite their advancing age.

Professor Jeste added: "Probably the most exciting breakthrough in the last decade has been the finding that neuroplasticity, the ability to generate neurones and synapses, continues throughout an individual's life."

He said that older people should gain confidence from the knowledge that they can become sharper and develop new skills in older age.


© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2010

CHINA: Cycle tours popular physical fitness means among senior citizens

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The 18th Cycle Touring Culture Show in Hohhot, North China attracted 70-year-old Qi Zhenjie from Xinjiang and 65-year-old Zhuang Lianju from Liaoning to ride their bikes to Hohhot, Xinhuanet reported on June 25. Seventy-five-year-old Chen Chengguang arrived in Hohhot after 35 days of cycling from his hometown in southern China's Guangdong province.

Cycle touring is becoming a popular physical fitness means among senior citizens in China. Statistics from the organizing committee of the recent show claim that the event attracted more than 4,200 senior citizens from around the country.

Wei Lian, 86, is the star member of a local cycle touring club. He has traveled by bike to many places. "Cycle touring is the best way for me to keep healthy," said Wei.

In line with the eco-friendly theme, many cycling lovers in China follow three principles - using non-fuel boosters for bicycles, not polluting water, and not scattering garbage.

"We believe the activity will create a pleasant life for the elderly and raise the quality of their life," said Zhao Baohua, Executive deputy president of China's Gerontological Society.

June 24, 2010

USA: Friendships, family relationships get better with age

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WEST LAFAYETTE, Indiana / Perdue University / June 24, 2010

Friendships, family relationships get better with age
thanks to forgiveness, stereotypes

Part of what makes those relationships so golden during the golden years is that people of all ages are more likely to forgive and respect one's elders, according to research from Purdue University. "Older adults report better marriages, more supportive friendships and less conflict with children and siblings," said Karen Fingerman, the Berner-Hanley Professor in Gerontology, Developmental and Family Studies.

"While physical and cognitive abilities decline with age, relationships improve. So what is so special about old age? We found that the perception of limited time, willingness to forgive, aging stereotypes and attitudes of respect all play a part. But it's more than just about how younger people treat an older person, it's about how people interact."

Fingerman and Susan T. Charles, an associate professor of psychology and social behavior at the University of California in Irvine, published their research in this month's Current Directions in Psychological Science.

This article is based on their earlier work, including research showing that older adults are less confrontational than younger adults when they are upset. The article also builds on studies published in 2009 in the Journal of Gerontology: Psychological Sciences and in 2008 in the journal Psychology and Aging.

One study compared young adults, ages 22-35, and older adults, ages 65-77, by asking the participants to respond to several stories about personal interactions. The study participants heard stories about how an adult committed a social transgression, such as rudeness towards a waitress or ignoring property boundaries. Half the subjects read the story with the offending character portrayed as an older adult and the other half read the same story, but the offending character was portrayed as a younger adult. When the offending character was elderly, participants of all ages indicated that the person who was offended would avoid conflict and not react, but the opposite was found if the offending character was younger. When participants read a story in which a young adult committed a social faux pas, they thought other characters should confront that person and tell them they were upset.

These assumptions play out in daily interactions that Fingerman compares to a dance.

"Each person is acting and reacting in response to his or her partner, and, in this case, each partner is anticipating the next person's move, and that determination is often based on age," she said. "People vary their behavior with social partners depending on their age. When there is a negative interaction, younger people are generally more aggressive and confrontational than older people are. But younger people often are more accommodating to older people when there is a negative interaction."

For example, an older adult may be more cordial because of the assumption that a younger person may be confrontational. At the same time, the younger adult may conform to age stereotypes that indicate they should be more patient with an older person or they may hold stereotypes that older adults cannot change and do not attempt to change this person.

"Also, with age, people get better at regulating their emotions when something upsets them," Fingerman said. "The other advantage is that older people often have more opportunity to select who they want to associate with because they are retired and do not go to work."

Other reasons for better treatment of older adults reflect care, concern and cherishing the moment. No matter the age, people are going to be more pleasant if they perceive that there is little time left in a relationship, Fingerman said. That applies not just to people who are elderly, but even young people who may not see each other because of life changes such as moving out of state or serving in the military. When time is limited, people want to make the most of their remaining interactions and enjoy the other person rather than spending time fighting.

"We've also seen this in studies when adult daughters don't want to confront their elderly mothers or discuss negative things with them because they feel there is little time left with them," Fingerman said.

Fingerman plans to study how the "need to respect one's elders" plays a role in other cultures. Her work is supported by the Department of Child Development and Family Studies.

Writer:
Amy Patterson Neubert
E-Mail: apatterson@purdue.edu

Source:
Karen Fingerman
E-Mail: karenf@purdue.edu

Visit The Good Old Age Blog
  Copyright © 2009-10 Purdue University.

June 23, 2010

CANADA: Longevity, inflation don't go hand-in-hand

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia / The Vancouver Sun / Business / June 23, 2010

Longevity, inflation don't go hand-in-hand
Inflation-indexed annuities may be one answer

By Jonathan Chevreau, Financial Post 

Inflation in Canada continues to remain subdued. Statistics Canada said yesterday that lower gas prices helped the annual inflation rate ease to 1.4% in May from 1.8% in April. The core inflation figure, which strips out energy, was 1.8% versus 1.9% the previous month.

Even so, long-term investors know inflation will eventually be a significant risk, especially for those on fixed incomes who expect to live long lives. Inflation and longevity risk are linked. You hope to live a long life but also know the longer you live, the more inflation will cut into your purchasing power.

And even at these low recent rates of inflation, the cost of living can be expected to double in 20 years, says finance professor Moshe Milvesky in his new book, Pensionize Your nest egg (Wiley Canada).

Immediate annuities, also called SPIAs or single premium immediate annuities, help address longevity risk, which is why Milevsky describes their role as longevity insurance. Luckily, there is also a relatively unknown product called the inflationindexed life annuity, which pays out more if inflation rises. Unfortunately, they probably have not been brought to your attention. The financial intermediaries you're dealing with typically "don't know, can't offer them or won't tell you," says Graham Cook, president of Victoria, B.C.-based Composite Finance Inc. He has a primer on the topic at www.yourannuityadvisor.ca.

The reason for this should be familiar by now: Advisors stand to earn only a small onetime commission on inflationindexed annuities. Many would rather sell fancier vehicles that pay ongoing trailer fees, even if they don't handle inflation particularly well. One such example is the new variable annuity/ segregated fund vehicles known as the Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit (GMWB). The net result is that inflation-indexed annuities suffer from the same underappreciation that inflation-indexed real return bonds experienced a decade ago.

Some financial advisors are familiar with such products. One is Clay Gillespie, a vice-president at Vancouver-based Rogers Group Financial. He includes inflation-indexed life annuities in a list of "guaranteed income alternatives" he provides to clients. His list also includes regular GICs and bonds, non-indexed life annuities, lifetime GICs or insured annuities and GMWBs. "An inflation-adjusted, indexed annuity mitigates not only the risk of outliving your money, but also the risk of losing purchasing power as goods and services continue to rise in price each year," he says.

Almost always, you should annuitize registered assets first, Cook says. Buying annuities with non-registered money is something you do after you've "pensionized" your registered funds. If you do use non-registered money, try "prescribed" annuities, which smooth out the ratio of interest and return of capital over the years. But there's a catch: You can't index prescribed annuities, says Asher Tward of Tridelta Financial. You can only index non-prescribed annuities.

The cost of living can be expected to double in 20 years

Another problem is there is a cost to inflation-indexed annuities: For the same amount of principal, non-indexed annuities pay higher benefits than indexed ones. So, if inflation never takes off, the inflation-indexed variety may underperform the vanilla unindexed versions. Ivon Hughes, president of Montrealbased The Hughes Trustco Group, says most Canadian insurance companies don't sell true inflation-indexed annuities, selling instead "indexed annuities" that increase payment amounts by whatever annual amount you specify: 2%, 5% etc. Here again, the higher the indexing the less the monthly payout, so Hughes is doubtful pensioners with indexed annuities will ever catch up with unindexed ones. Hughes produced a quote for a joint life annuity from Standard Life that is fully indexed to the Consumer Price Index. A couple aged 62 with $175,000 in an RRSP, with no guarantee period, would receive $525 a month for life. But a comparable regular unindexed annuity generates a much heftier $826 a month.

"Any kind of indexing with a fixed amount of capital deposited means something has to give if the guarantee is for life," Hughes says. "either earlier or later, you have to receive less income. There's no way around it."

However, it's not all-or-nothing, Cook says. A mix of escalating and/or CPI-indexed annuities can work well too. "The idea is to cover all your guaranteed living expenses with an investment that will provide guaranteed income. Think of it as a CPP/OAS top-up strategy".

jchevreau@nationalpost.com

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

CHINA: Elderly couple wanted as live-in parents for married couple

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BEIJING / China National Committee on Ageing / June 23, 2010

Chinese couple advertise for elderly couple as parents

A 30-year-old woman named Dong Ni in Danyang, Jiangsu Province and her husband are advertising for an elderly couple to live with them as "parents" following the death of the husband's parents in 2004.

Her parents are too old and set in their ways to relocate to Danyang, Dong said. A healthy and childless elderly couple would be a blessing for their home and for their young daughter as grandparents.

"I want the chance to be filial and to have a truly happy family," she said, though so far the family has found no takers.

Editor:Song Wei

Source: China National Committee on Ageing Copyright 2008

USA: Caring for an Elderly Loved One Sometimes Has Positive Elements

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NAPLES, Florida / Aging Care / News / June 22, 2010

Although long-term care of sick or disabled loved ones is widely recognized as a threat to the caregiver's health and quality of life, a new study led by University at Buffalo psychologist Michael Poulin, PhD, finds that in some contexts, helping valued loved ones may promote the well being of helpers.

"Does a Helping Hand Mean a Heavy Heart?," published in the journal Psychology and Aging (2010, Vol. 25., No. 1), reports on a study by Poulin and five co-authors from the University of Michigan Department of Internal Medicine, which closely analyzed helping behavior and well-being among 73 spousal caregivers, many of them elderly.

Poulin, an assistant professor of psychology, says the study team wanted to learn if there were some positive aspects of caregiving, aspects that did not provoke the burnout, high stress and poor health associated with being a caregiver. If so, they wanted to know why these aspects had a positive effect.

They learned that despite the burdensome nature of their role, caregivers experience more positive emotions and fewer negative emotions when they engage in "active care" like feeding, bathing, toileting and otherwise physically caring for the spouse.

"Our data don't tell us exactly what psychological processes are responsible," he says, "but we hypothesize that people may be hardwired so that actively attending to the concrete needs and feelings of others reduces our personal anxiety."

The study found that passive care, on the other hand, which requires the spouse to simply be nearby in case anything should go wrong, provokes negative emotions in the caretaker, and leads to fewer positive emotions.

Read Full Article  in Health News Digest

©2010 MediaBrains Inc.

June 22, 2010

BULGARIA: By 2050, 46% of the Bulgarians will be of age over 65

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SOFIA, Bulgaria / Standart News / June 22, 2010

By 2040 the population of Bulgaria will shrink by a million and a half, announced yesterday Hristina Mitreva, head of the National Insurance Institute. To her words, by that time 46% of the Bulgarians will be of age over 65. The number of pensioners will increase by 400,000 compared to their number in 2010.

Bulgaria's Minister of Social Policy and Labour, Totyo Mladenov and the director of the National Social Security Institute, Hristina Mitreva opened a debate on the pension reform in Bulgaria. Photo Georgi Nikolov


"The demographic problem is one of the chief issues concerning the pension system in Bulgaria," Mitreva said. The solution to the case is encouragement of young people's employment and their remaining for longer at the labour market, experts believe. For over a year the pensions expenses have increased by 680 million levs, although in 2010 pensions have not been raised, according to Mitreva. The Institute director believes that the securing of financial stability of the pension system is another serious problem.

© 2010 Standart. Copyright 'Standart News Ltd.'

June 21, 2010

USA: “Dad’s New Love: How It Turned Out”

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NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / June 21, 2010

An Elderly Man’s Last Love Story
By TARA PARKER-POPE

On The New Old Age blog, writer Anne Underwood shares the story of her elderly father who left his retirement home to move in with his girlfriend. Her father called it “part of the adventure of life,” but his daughter was worried about the toll the move might take on him physically and financially. She writes:

When I first wrote about his impending move in this blog, some readers were concerned, as I was, about the potential pitfalls. Others expressed outright admiration. “I hope I am as courageous, wise and unafraid” at his age, said one reader. “Bravo!” said another.

But the wisdom of this move was open to speculation at the time. A year later, I know how it all turned out.

This is a love story with a bittersweet ending, but one that honors the complex emotional lives of elderly men and women. Read the full column, “Dad’s New Love: How It Turned Out,” on The New Old Age blog.

 
 
 
 
 
Dad’s New Love: How It Turned Out
By ANNE UNDERWOOD

Dad called it “part of the adventure of life.” In March 2009, at the age of 87, he moved out of his retirement community in Baltimore, bundled himself into his Prius and drove down to Griffin, Ga., where he’d rented an apartment. There was a woman involved, of course — a lovely woman named Gloria, whom he’d met on eHarmony.com.

Dad called it “part of the adventure of life.” In March 2009, at the age of 87, he moved out of his retirement community in Baltimore, bundled himself into his Prius and drove down to Griffin, Ga., where he’d rented an apartment. There was a woman involved, of course — a lovely woman named Gloria, whom he’d met on eHarmony.com.

Ever the practical daughter, I reacted at first with horror. Instead of having a support staff to help him, he would have to do his own cooking, cleaning and shopping — major tasks at any age, and all the more so for Dad, who was suffering from heart failure. I wondered who would care for him when he inevitably declined, and I doubted he could really afford this move. Dad brushed off all my warnings, insisting that he would be fine.

Getty Images

When I first wrote about his impending move in this blog, some readers were concerned, as I was, about the potential pitfalls. Others expressed outright admiration. “I hope I am as courageous, wise and unafraid” at his age, said one reader. “Bravo!” said another.

But the wisdom of this move was open to speculation at the time. A year later, I know how it all turned out.

Dad loved his adopted home, and, with Gloria’s help, he created a beautiful and tranquil living space in an apartment near hers. Gloria held a grand “Welcome to Georgia” party for him. And Dad quickly endeared himself to his neighbors and shopkeepers around town, who were drawn to his soft-spoken courtesy and deep kindness.

But his journal, as I later learned, betrayed a deeper understanding of his problems than he ever would admit to me — or to Gloria, for that matter. His stamina was rapidly flagging. Even before setting out for Georgia, he wrote, “Truly I don’t have the energy for this move. Need for money and (long-term) care impending.” In fact, he teetered when he walked, and every few steps he had to stop and rest. From mid-October on, he was, as he put it, “deflating.”

His finances were no healthier. As soon as he arrived, he began spending money fitting out his new apartment, framing pictures, buying new furniture and helping Gloria with her own household expenses — but he skimped on blood-sugar test strips for his borderline diabetes. I was appalled when he said he wasn’t going to buy a hearing aid until he could pay off the installments on his furniture. I sent a check, which he used to pay other debts.

Nor did his romance fulfill his deepest desires. Not content with mere friendship, Dad was searching for the ideal union of body and soul that had escaped him in his two marriages. He embraced this final quest with passion and urgency. But it was a romantic quest no woman could realistically have fulfilled. Anyone else his age would have been thrilled to have found such a deep and caring friendship so late in life. Not Dad. “The dream died,” he finally told me, admitting to a deep depression.

Perhaps with more time and better health, he could have made it work. But by this point, he was failing — “so tired, I . . .” read his incomplete journal entry on Nov. 11.

The next day he entered the hospital.

I flew down to Georgia. For hours every day, I read to him —everything from articles in Newsweek and The Nation to Greg Mortenson’s new book, “From Stones Into Schools” and “Winnie the Pooh” (which Dad had read to me as a child). I brought a portable CD player to the hospital and played his favorite recordings for him. I spoon-fed him meals and just watched him rest. Dad never gave up, even on the worst days. He always expressed eagerness to move on to “the next stage” — by which, when questioned, he said he meant rehab and then home. He talked often about what his life would be like when he got back to his apartment.

It was not to be.

Dad died on Dec. 21. In his cardiologist’s assessment, the move had probably shortened his life. But was it wrong for Dad to have moved to Georgia? I cannot make that statement. One afternoon while I sat vigil, he clearly said Gloria’s name in his sleep. And on his deathbed, his final words — mouthed despite a respirator tube down his throat — were addressed to her: “I love you.”

For an hour after Dad’s heart monitor flat-lined, Gloria and I sat with his body. We read him poems, talked to him and recited psalms, in case some last pulses of electricity remained in that amazing mind of his. We continued talking to him, even when the nurse came in to unhook the IV’s, pull out the respirator and shut off the machines. The funeral home director arrived.

As we followed the stretcher out into the bracing night air, I couldn’t help being proud of Dad and the courageous life he had lived. And just in case, as Dad firmly believed, there should be some sort of afterlife, I silently wished him farewell on his journey. This, too, I thought, is “part of the adventure of life.”

Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company