August 31, 2011

JAPAN: Japan may soon lose its top longevity ranking

SEATTLE, Washington / MSNBC News  / Health / Aging / August 30, 2011

Japan may soon lose its top longevity ranking
Suicides, obesity, smoking and poor quality health coverage all contribute, study says

By Joseph Brownstein

 
 
Japan has long been the world leader in longevity, but some experts are now suggesting that the island nation may soon face a drop in the rankings. The decline could be fueled in part by the country's significant suicide rate, rising body mass index and relatively high rates of smoking, according to Dr. Christopher J.L. Murray, director Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington in Seattle.

"In an era of economic stagnation, political turmoil, aging populations, and inadequate tobacco control, Japan does not seem to be effective in addressing its new set of health challenges," Murray wrote.

"Without concerted action, Japan, like the USA, is likely to continue dropping in the global mortality league tables," he added.

Murray's comments are published in the medical journal the Lancet this week in an issue devoted to exploring the reasons for Japan's health successes.

Although Japan's decline, relative to the longevity of other nations, will not be as severe as the relative decline of the U.S., "it is a cautionary tale that success in the past does not guarantee top performance in the future," Murray wrote.

Murray's prediction relies on, among other sources, a research paper in the same issue entitled "What has made the population of Japan healthy?"

In that article, researchers from the University of Tokyo found that while Japan has achieved a record life expectancy of 86 years for women, "Japan now needs to tackle major health challenges that are emanating from a rapidly aging population, causes that are not amenable to health technologies, and the effects of increasing social disparities to sustain the improvement in population health."

Japan's record-breaking longevity
Murray said that the success of Japanese health care emerged after World War II, with declining infant mortality and reduction of infectious diseases.

That was followed by a period from 1975 to 1995, during which mortality dropped in many nations, as well as Japan.

But in recent years, he said, "Japan has fallen behind Sweden, Italy, and Australia for men, and behind Sweden for women. If recent trends continue, other nations are likely to achieve lower rates of adult mortality than Japan."

Part of Japan's health success has been attributed to universal health coverage, accomplished at a relatively low price: the country spends 8.5 percent of its GDP on health care, while the U.S. spends 16.4 percent, and Germany spends 10.7 percent, Murray said.

But that adds another potential reason for the fall, Murray said.

"Although Japan has a universal health care system, the quality of the care delivered might be low," Murray said, citing the example of coverage for high cholesterol treatments that is much lower than in other high-income countries.

To further increase the country's longevity by reducing its adult mortality, Japan may need to revamp its health care system, he said.

The oldest nation on Earth
But longer life is not the only change that has come to Japan in recent decades. A declining birth rate and long lifespan have helped make Japan the oldest nation on earth, with a median age above 40.

"The aging population, smoking, metabolic syndrome and suicide are all major challenges facing the public health system in Japan," said D. Craig Willcox, a professor of public health at Okinawa International University and at the University of Hawaii, who co-led the long-term Okinawa Centenarian Study.

Story: Accomplishing amazing athletic feats — in their 80s and 90s

Yoga instructor Tao Porchon-Lynch, 93, sent a photo of herself in the lotus pose to her doctor. “Don’t tell me I can’t do it,” she said. Joyce Pines

But the nation faces the need for cultural change as well, said Willcox, who was not involved with Murray's article.

"Losing status among nations may upset the national pride," Willcox said. But "the more important issue is reforming Japanese society to make it more age-friendly, and doing away with age discrimination," he said.

Willcox said he questioned whether it made sense for most Japanese companies and institutions to have mandatory retirement age of 65 years, when 40 percent of the population will be beyond that age in a few decades. He noted that this retirement age doesn't apply to everyone in the country.

Health as a social responsibility
Willcox said he believes, however, that some of the central ideas responsible for the success of Japanese health care may help in the United States. Universal health coverage plays an important role, along with some other ideas.

"In Japan, people are taught to think of their health as not only a personal issue, but also a social responsibility," he said. For example, towns in which not enough people get health screenings may pay more in taxes. "If you don't get your health exam, the whole town could suffer, and everyone could end up paying more taxes!"

Additionally, Willcox said, the government has adapted its language in discussing health conditions such as cardiovascular disease and some age-related cancers, calling them "lifestyle-related diseases" instead of "age-associated diseases," and the public has taken to the change.

"You can see the subtle shift from something that just 'comes along with age' or something you can prevent through your lifestyle," he said. "As a specialist in public health, I thought that was a brilliant move."

© 2011 msnbc.com
_____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

PAKISTAN: Six sons, wife threw him out says 75-year old

LAHORE / The Daily Times / News / August 31, 2011

By Ali Hassan

ISLAMABAD: Imagining festivity of Eidul Fitr without near and dear ones is a nightmare. To almost all of us such feelings send shiver through spines. But there are hundreds in capital who will celebrate this joyous moment without their loved ones.

There are large number of senior citizens in care centers of federal capital, who wait for their relatives on Eid every year and will spend another Eid without meeting their loved ones. On the other hand the government departments and relevant NGOs are not taking any step to help such persons. The political and social personalities also do not bother to visit these orphans even on the Eid day, which shows that they are not interested in solving the problem of public and they have sympathy for the poor.

Daily Times learnt that there are 20 elders living in Edhi Home in Islamabad.

Mohammad Fiaz, a 75-year-old blind man belonging to Gujar Khan is also living in Edhi Home for four years. He has six sons and a wife threw him out of house and he was living in Edhi Home. He said that what would be the life of a person whose sons had told their father to get lost. He said he missed his family on Eid but he also knew that no one from his family would come to visit him.

Source: Daily Times 
 
The above is an edited version. Click here to read full report. Eidul Fitr is being celebrated on August 31. Photo by courtesy of THE LAHORE TIMES.
____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 30, 2011

UK: Imagining the Downside of Immortality

NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / Sunday Review / Opinion Pages / August 28, 2011

'Torchwood' Gives Glimpse of Eternal Life

 
“The Fountain of Youth,” painted by Lucas Cranach the Elder in 1546, illustrates our long obsession with immortality. Gemaeldegalerie, Staatliche Museen, Berlin/Art Resource, NY

By Stephen Cave

Stephen Cave is the author of the forthcoming book “Immortality: The Quest to Live Forever and How It Drives Civilization.”

Berlin

IMAGINE nobody dies. All of a sudden, whether through divine intervention or an elixir slipped into the water supply, death is banished. Life goes on and on; all of us are freed from fear that our loved ones will be plucked from us, and each of us is rich in the most precious resource of all: time.

Wouldn’t it be awful?

This is the premise of the TV series “Torchwood: Miracle Day,” a co-production of Starz and the BBC that has been running over the summer and ends in September. The “miracle” of the title is that no one dies anymore, but it proves to be a curse as overpopulation soon threatens to end civilization. The show is a nice twist on our age-old dream of living forever. And it is right to be pessimistic about what would happen if this dream were fulfilled — but for the wrong reasons. Materially, we could cope with the arrival of the elixir. But, psychologically, immortality would be the end of us.

The problem is that our culture is based on our striving for immortality. It shapes what we do and what we believe; it has inspired us to found religions, write poems and build cities. If we were all immortal, the motor of civilization would sputter and stop.

Poets and philosophers have long been attuned to the fact that the quest for immortality drives much of humanity’s peculiar ways. But only in recent decades has scientific evidence backed this up.

In a study that began in 1989, a group of American social psychologists found that just briefly reminding people that they would die had a remarkable impact on their political and religious views.

In their first experiment, the researchers recruited court judges from Tucson. Half the judges were reminded of their mortality (via an otherwise innocuous personality test) and half were not. They were then all asked to rule on a hypothetical case of prostitution similar to those they ruled on. The judges who had first been reminded of their mortality set a bond nine times higher than those who hadn’t (averaging $455 compared to $50).

These psychologists — Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski — were testing the hypothesis that we have developed our cultural worldviews in order to give us the sense that we might defy death. They reasoned that if this were not the case, when faced with reminders of mortality, people would cling more fiercely to their beliefs and be more negative about those who threatened them. This is just what happened with the judges: when reminded that they would one day die, they were more severe in punishing those who violated their worldview.

Social psychologists have since tested this hypothesis in more than 400 experiments that aim to explore different aspects of our worldview, from patriotism to religion. So far, their results consistently support a thesis — known as Terror Management Theory — that particular aspects of our outlook are governed by our need to manage our fear of death. In other words, our cultural, philosophical and religious systems exist to promise us immortality.

Every civilization has had such systems. They are embodied in the pyramids of Egypt, the cathedrals of Europe and even the skyscrapers of modern cities. Odds are that you too, dear reader, subscribe to at least one such system — a set of beliefs that motivates you and somehow promises life’s continuance. Perhaps you believe that if you attend church or a synagogue or a mosque, your soul will endure in another realm. Perhaps you are encouraging your children’s confidence that something of you will live on in them; or perhaps you are taking vitamins and jogging in the hope that you can outrun the Reaper.

Some of these systems overtly flaunt their death-defying promise: Christianity and Islam, for example, make a great deal of the prospect of eternal bliss. As do the arts, in particular cinema and its accompanying celebrity culture — as the film star James Dean acknowledged when he said that “the only success, the only greatness, is immortality.” But when we look deeper we also find the promise of deathlessness in places where it is not at all explicit: in the accumulation of wealth, with its attendant aura of life-sustaining power; through immersion in a greater whole, whether a nation or a football team; or even in the pursuit of scientific research, with its claim to enduring truth.

The real question posed by the “Torchwood” scenario is: what would happen to all our death-defying systems if there were no more death? The logical answer is that they would be superfluous. We would have no need for progress or art, faith or fame. Suddenly, we would have nothing to do, yet in the greatest of ironies, we would have endless eons in which to do it. Action would lose its purpose and time its value. This is the true awfulness of immortality.

Let us be grateful that the elixir continues to elude us — and toast instead our finitude.

© 2011 The New York Times Company

Read Steve Cave's article in the FINANCIAL TIMES
_____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 29, 2011

INDIA: Government not implementing any centrally sponsored scheme for seniors

NEW DELHI / Press Information Bureau / August 29, 2011

The Government of India's Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment is not implementing any Centrally Sponsored Scheme for the welfare of senior citizens. This information was given by Mr. D. Napoleon,  Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, in the Lok Sabha today.

However, his Ministry is implementing a Central Sector Scheme of Integrated Programme for Older Persons through Non-Government Organizations, Panchayati Raj/ Local Bodies, etc. to cater to the basic needs of destitute senior citizens viz. shelter, food, recreation, health care etc., the Minister stated.


The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare is implementing a Centrally Sponsored Scheme namely, “National Programme for Health Care of Elderly (NPHCE)” being implemented by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to improve health services for the elderly. The Programme has been taken up in 100 selected districts of 21 States and 8 Regional Geriatric Institutes across the country on cost sharing basis with the participating States at the ratio of 80:20 (excluding the expenditure on 8 Regional Medical Institutes).

Monitoring and Evaluation of the Programme is being done, in-house, on an ongoing basis. The first meeting of the State Programme Officers (Non Communicable Diseases) was held on 29th July, 2011 to take stock of the implementation of the Programme.

Source: Government of India, PIB
____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

UK: 100,000 older workers forced to retire early

LONDON, England / The Telegraph / News / August 29, 2011

Tens of thousands of older workers face an enforced early retirement with a reduced pension because of the economic slowdown, new research suggests

By James Kirkup, Political Correspondent

A think-tank has estimated that around 100,000 people over 50 who lost their jobs at the start of Britain's economic crisis are now at risk of being forced to retire earlier than they planned.

That will leave them living in retirement with a lower pension than they had hoped for, according to the Institute of Public Policy Research, which has links to the Labour Party.

Tony Dolphin, IPPR's chief economist, said: "Almost a quarter of those who have been unemployed for more than two years are over 50. The risk is that older people who have been out of work for this long stand little chance of ever working again. This means many will be forced into early retirement, which will mean a lower standard of living during their old age.”

The IPPR also estimated that the number of 18 to 24-year-olds who have been jobless for more than two years has almost trebled since 2008, from 36,000 to 95,000

Mr Dolphin said that the long-term unemployed lose skills and confidence and “could find themselves permanently shut out of the jobs market.”

Chris Grayling, the Employment Minister said the Government is working to tackle unemployment though the Work Programme, its welfare-to-work scheme.

He also insisted that ministers “have a plan for growth which will encourage businesses to expand and take on more workers."

Labour is planning to step up its attacks on the Coalition over the economy in the coming weeks.

A leaked Labour memo also suggested that senior party figures are discussing new attacks on David Cameron for shifting to the right on issues like crime and immigration. The memo, by Shaun Woodward, a shadow cabinet member, suggests that Labour should criticise Mr Cameron’s hard line on rioting youths and uncontrolled immigration. However, some Labour MPs privately fear that Mr Cameron’s stance on those issues will prove popular with voters, meaning Mr Woodward’s strategy could harm Labour.

© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2011
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: "Living to 100 and Beyond"

BETHESDA, Maryland / The Futurist / August 28, 2011

100 Plus: How the Coming Age of Longevity Will Change Everything, From Careers and Relationships to Family and Faith

Humanity is on the cusp of an exciting longevity revolution. The first person to live to 150 years has probably already been born.

What will your life look like when you live to be over 100? Will you be healthy? Will your marriage need a sunset clause? How long will you have to work? Will you finish one career at sixty-five only to go back to school to learn a new one? And then, will you be happily working for another sixty years? Maybe you’ll be a parent to a newborn and a grandparent at the same time. Will the world become overpopulated? And how will living longer affect your finances, your family life, and your views on religion and the afterlife?

In 100 Plus, futurist Sonia Arrison takes us on an eye-opening journey to the future at our doorsteps, where science and technology are beginning to radically change life as we know it. She introduces us to the people transforming our lives: the brilliant scientists and genius inventors and the billionaires who fund their work. The astonishing advances to extend our lives—and good health—are almost here. In the very near future fresh organs for transplants will be grown in laboratories, cloned stem cells will bring previously unstoppable diseases to their knees, and living past 100 will be the rule, not the exception.

Sonia Arrison brings over a decade of experience researching and writing about cutting-edge advances in science and technology to 100 Plus (Basic Books, 2011), painting a vivid picture of a future that only recently seemed like science fiction, but now is very real. 100 Plus is the first book to give readers a comprehensive understanding of how life-extending discoveries will change our social and economic worlds. This illuminating and indispensable text will help us navigate the thrilling journey of life beyond 100 years.

About the Author
Sonia Arrison is a Senior Fellow at the Pacific Research Institute and a columnist for TechNewsWorld. Her work has appeared on CNN and in the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today. She lives in Atherton, California.

Copyright World Future Society
____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

INDIA: Anna Hazare, 74, Ends 12-day Hunger Strike as Parliament Agrees to His Demands

NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / Asia Pacific / August 28, 2011

By Jim Yardley

NEW DELHI — India’s Parliament capitulated on Saturday to the anticorruption campaigner Anna Hazare and the hundreds of thousands of people who took to the streets to support his cause in a standoff that lasted nearly two weeks.

After a day of wrangling and speechifying, Parliament adopted a resolution endorsing Mr. Hazare’s central demands for shaping legislation to create an independent anticorruption agency empowered to scrutinize public officials and bureaucrats in India.

Anna Hazare, center, in New Delhi on Saturday. He sought the creation of an antigraft agency, and went on a hunger strike. Sajjad Hussain/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


Mr. Hazare, 74, has been waging a hunger strike for 12 days, refusing to call it off unless Parliament adopted his proposed legislation to fight graft rather than a bill put forward by the government. Huge crowds of supporters have participated in peaceful protests and rallies across India in what became an outpouring of public disgust over corruption.

After Parliament accepted some of his demands in a nonbinding "sense of the house" vote, Mr. Hazare ended his fast on Sunday, accepting a glass of juice from a 5-year-old girl, according to The Associated Press.

On Saturday night at the public grounds in New Delhi where Mr. Hazare had been fasting, thousands of his supporters started rejoicing, even as lawmakers were finishing their speeches in Parliament.

“There is a need of a change in the system,” said Pranab Mukherjee, the powerful minister who introduced the resolution into the Lok Sabha, the lower house. “And we are doing so.”

Parliament must still take several steps before final passage of a law to create the anticorruption agency, known as the Lokpal, before the end of the session. Saturday’s resolution also was marked by a touch of legislative sleight-of-hand. Mr. Hazare’s team had wanted a public vote in order to identify lawmakers who opposed the measure. Instead, the measure was read aloud in both houses and given approval without a vote.

“It was unanimous,” said R. P. N. Singh, a lawmaker and government minister, when asked on NDTV, a news channel, about the lack of a vote. “Both the houses have stepped up their resolve to fight corruption.” Photo courtesy: The Guardian/Mustafa Quraishi/AP

Mr. Hazare’s hunger strike dominated public life in India and exposed a visceral public revulsion at the depth of corruption here, large and small. Hundreds of thousands of people had poured into the streets across the country to support his campaign for a tough anticorruption agency. Movie stars, gurus, politicians, singers and others flocked to his side at Ramlila Maidan, which served as his fasting site. Crowds filled the grounds despite heat and rain.
In recent days, the impasse has been centered on three demands by Mr. Hazare: that Parliament pass a Lokpal law during its current session; that similar agencies to fight corruption be established at the state level; and that a transparent process be established for public grievances. Those demands were endorsed in Saturday’s resolution, though the final details will be codified when the legislation moves to a special parliamentary committee.

“Parliament has spoken,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told the Indian news media on Saturday. “The will of Parliament is the will of the people.”

If anything, though, the Hazare movement exposed the depth of disillusionment with India’s politics. Mr. Hazare’s hunger strike became a platform to articulate broader public frustrations.

He has lost more than 15 pounds, and refused medical advice to take glucose.

“You have done wonders,” Mr. Hazare told the crowd at Ramlila Maidan on Saturday morning, before Parliament approved the resolution. “Today the Parliament is discussing the issues you have raised. It is the people’s parliament that is supreme.”

P. J. Anthony and Hari Kumar contributed reporting.


© 2011 The New York Times Company
_____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 28, 2011

USA: Don't let aging myths get you down

EVERETT, Washington / The Daily Herald / Life / August 28, 2011

By Sarah Jackson, Herald Writer

Getting older isn't easy, especially if you're not feeling well

People, doctors included, sometimes assume your problems are a part of old age and that you'll just have to live with them.

But that's just wrong, said Kamilia Dunsky, a geriatric mental health specialist with Senior Services of Snohomish County.

All of us, even as we age, are entitled to a reasonably high quality of life, including excellent health.

Buying into stereotypes and myths takes individuality out of the equation, Dunsky said.

"We all age differently," she said.

To prove the point, Dunsky often tells a little story: An 85-year-old man goes to see his doctor and complains of a pain in his right knee.

Photo Courtesy: International Business Times

"Ah, you're just getting older," the doctor says. "You're 85."

The man responds: "My left knee is 85, too, and it feels fine."

It's an illustration of one of the most common myths of aging: Being old means being in poor health.

"I think we live in a rather ageist culture," Dunsky said. "There are things that are common as we age and things that are normal as we age."

Yes, joint problems are common, but they are not normal, Dunsky said.

Seniors need to know exactly why they're having health problems so they can seek the best treatment: Is it osteoarthritis? Is it a rheumatological condition or something else?

Dunsky's advice is the same for depression. It may be common among seniors, but it's not normal and should be treated.  Even people who are in the process of dying can enjoy a positive self-image and even joy.

"We want to go all the way through to the end and continue to feel OK about ourselves, and to enjoy our life and enjoy positive relationships, and have hopes and pleasure in life, and find meaning in life," Dunsky said.

Another myth Dunsky likes to debunk in her talks with seniors is that genetics are everything when it comes to overall health for seniors, that for successful aging you should "choose your parents wisely," a disempowering sentiment.

"Heredity is a tremendously powerful factor. It's not as important as many people assume," Dunsky said.

Environment and lifestyle have a big influence on whether we develop certain diseases, Dunsky said. Seniors can maintain their good health with diet and exercise and with medications that their parents didn't have during their golden years.

Here's another myth: You can't teach an old dog new tricks. Research on older groups has proven that, even as we age, our personality and creativity continue to develop, Dunsky said. That means there's more room for optimism as well as new interests and hobbies.

"This is a big shift in thinking about aging," Dunsky said. "You've got to be able to take up the accordion when you're 85. "We can continue to learn and grow, and we develop new brain cells and new synapses. We lay down new memories."

Dunsky advises all of us, not just seniors, to be realistic about expectations, however: Don't expect to be an overnight virtuoso.

"Most of us are average," she said. "That is what average means. It's OK. It's great."

If you want to age well, find a way to be positive, Dunsky said.

Studies of centenarians have found optimism as a common trait among people who live to be 100.  Seniors who believe in themselves and have a positive outlook can thrive. They might say or think to themselves: "I have the ability to handle what life brings me," Dunsky said.

"I can handle what's coming. It's never too late to benefit from healthy living."  "It's never too late to decide that I want to maintain the meaning in my life."

Copyright © 2011 The Daily Herald Co
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

UK: Home is slammed over care of elderly

BOLTON, Manchester / The Bolton News / August 27, 2011

A CARE home has been threatened with closure unless it makes “rapid” improvements.

Inspectors for watchdog the Care Quality Commission (CQC) said they had major concerns over how elderly residents were being looked after at St Catherine’s Care Home in Horwich.

Medical records at the home, in Queen Street, were not secure, and there were significant gaps in safety procedures and the care of residents’ with dementia, inspectors said.

NHS Bolton and Bolton Council have both immediately suspended all new placements at the home.

Sue McMillan, Regional Director for CQC in the North West, said: “The care at St Catherine’s is nowhere near good enough.

“The law says these essential standards are what everyone should be able to expect when they receive care.

“If we do not see rapid evidence of improvement, we are likely to take enforcement action to protect the safety and welfare of people.”

Action the CQC can take includes shutting a service, fining a home up to £50,000, or taking the company to court.

The report, which follows a July inspection, found there were “significant gaps” in care standards and practices in supporting people suffering from dementia.

There were also “major concerns” over food and drink at the home, with residents’ dietary needs not being met, leaving them at risk of malnutrition and dehydration.

Inspectors found staff were unsure of what residents on the dementia unit had eaten. Records were not kept for food and fluid intake.

There were significant gaps in the quality and security of residents’ medical records and personal information as well.

The report said the current care home manager had been in the job for six weeks when the inspection was carried out.

There were also major concerns with cleanliness — inspectors found congealed hair in the sinks of some bedrooms, no soap or towels in some rooms and a heavily soiled dressing gown left in a wardrobe alongside other clothes in one room.

Bolton Council’s director of Adult Services, John Rutherford, said: “We are concerned at the findings of the inspection.

“The council currently funds 22 placements at St Catherine’s, of which 10 are in residensignifitial care and 12 in nursing care funded with NHS Bolton.

“The care and safety of all our vulnerable residents is a priority for the council and we will work with the home and CQC to ensure standards are of an acceptable quality for those residents.”

St Catherine’s is a privately owned care home catering for a maximum of 61 residents.

Run by national care company Four Seasons Care Homes, the home looks after the elderly, people with dementia and those with physical disabilities.

The home’s previous inspection, two years ago, was positive and St Catherine’s received a “two-star good” rating.

A spokesman for Four Seasons Care Homes said: “We regret that in this instance the quality of care provided in St Catherine’s Care Home fell short of the standards we usually deliver.

“We accept the criticisms of the CQC inspectors and are addressing them.”

© Copyright 2001-2011 The Bolton News
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 27, 2011

USA: Where Is the Facebook for Old People?

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts / Technology Review / Technology / August 26, 2011

Where Is the Facebook for Old People?
They did it for phones - why not social networks?

By Christopher Mims

Pew just released a study whose takeaway is that the first time ever, half of all Americans report being on some kind of social network, such as Facebook, Myspace, Linkedin or Twitter. (The survey didn't mention Google+ or any others.)

But of course almost a third of Americans don't access the Internet at all, ever, so in some sense the proportion who are accessing social networks is only relevant when compared to how many are accessing the web in the first place. And here's where it gets interesting: One in three internet users -- tens of millions of Americans -- use the web without ever updating their status or checking out friends' endless barrage of baby pictures.


Who are these Internet-savvy people who have completely dodged the personality-transforming phenomenon that is Facebook? For the most part, they're older. While 83 percent of 18-29 year-olds use social networks (the figure is 89 percent for women in that bracket), only half of those 50-64 use social networks. (And what portion of those users were dragged onto them just so they could keep tabs on the young people?)

This suggests a business opportunity.

Where is the online social networking equivalent of the Jitterbug phone? Easy to use, foolproof, and designed, more than anything, to keep you connected to loved ones. Perhaps that's the problem with social networks in the first place: they reward display and narcissism, exactly the traits most closely associated with youth. Apparently genuine connection will have to wait for a more advanced technology.

They did it for phones - why not social networks?

© 2011 Technology Review
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

JAPAN: He helps sustain 17th-century ceremonial dance rituals

TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / Life in Japan / August 27, 2011

Jake Davies holds two of his Iwami-Kagura masks — the female demon Hannya (right)
and the Akaoni (red demon) — at his home in the small town of Sakurae in Shimane. 
Rob Gilhooly Photos

Mask maker keeping Shimane tradition alive

Englishman's skills help sustain 17th-century 'Iwami-kagura' ceremonial dance rituals

By Rob Gilhooly - Special to The Japan Times

SAKURAE, Shimane Prefecture — Hanging on the walls of Jake Davies' home are around 20 artifacts that seem at odds with the idyllic village in Sakurae, Shimane Prefecture where his rustic abode is set.

Some depict outlandish beings with horns and frightening fangs. Even those that seem more terrestrial possess some quirky feature — a wonky, spoutlike mouth, or eyes so droopy that given half a chance they might just slide away down their chubby cheeks.

However, in this part of the prefecture, which locals still refer to by its old name, Iwami, households not displaying these traditional masks are few and far between, he says.

"Everyone around here puts them up as gargoyles, to keep the evil spirits out of their house," says Davies, 56, who hails from Coventry, England. "So there'll be a 'Hannya,' the female demon, or 'Shoki,' the demon queller, and so on. They are everywhere — even at railway stations."

Davies proceeds to go through the names and stories behind the motley crew peering down unnervingly from his living room walls, and it's clear he knows his stuff. Which is of little surprise. In these parts he is known as the only foreigner in Japan producing the masks used in traditional Iwami-kagura performances.

Iwami-kagura is one of several types of kagura (literally, god-entertainment), a ceremonial dance whose roots can be found in shamanic possession rites originally performed by priests. Some believe that its earliest form was a ritual derived from the legendary tale of the sun goddess Amaterasu and the entertaining way in which Ame-no-Uzume — the goddess credited with introducing fun to the world — persuaded her reclusive, cave-dwelling counterpart to lighten up and join the party.

Other masks created by Davies include Kurooni (black ogre) and Japanese Ogre

Over the years, many types of kagura have evolved, incorporating Shinto and, to a lesser degree, Buddhist elements. Some are highly ritualistic, such as the miko-kagura performed for the Imperial court by miko shrine maidens — descendents, it is said, of Ame-no-Uzume, while others are highly theatrical, almost kabuki-esque.

This latter style, known under the umbrella term sato-kagura (village-kagura), was more actively promoted during the Meiji Era (1868-1912) in an attempt to halt the participation of priests and nullify its shamanistic roots and Buddhist influences, instead encouraging local resident participation in a purely Shinto rite.

It subsequently flourished and today a variety of kagura dances and music are performed at many local festivals and other public events around the country, especially in Shimane Prefecture and neighboring Hiroshima Prefecture. Some can be pretty bawdy, lasting an entire day and requiring a healthy dose of audience heckling.

According to the Cultural Affairs Agency, there are 343 kagura troupes throughout Japan performing numerous types of the dance, including miko-kagura, Ise-ryu kagura, Izumo-ryu kagura and the style from Iwami, which takes its title from the name of a former province that today forms the western part of Shimane Prefecture.

Iwami-kagura is a series of dances accompanied by flutes, percussion and voice that is believed to date back to the early 17th century and is distinguished from other styles by its fast tempo, called hacchoshi, and the elaborate dress and masks.

Davies' fascination with kagura in general and the Iwami masks in particular began eight years ago when he and his Japanese wife, Yoko, both tired of city life in Kyoto, decided to take part in the "U-turn/I-turn" program, a government-backed project aimed at luring urbanites into depopulated rural areas.

Having bought a deserted farmhouse and land to cultivate, the couple started out on a course of self-sufficiency, the skills for which Davies had gleaned in the '90s while working as a sheep herder on an Indian reservation in Arizona, where he also met his wife, a sun dancer-turned-garment designer.

Intrigued by the local history and culture, Davies began roaming the area collecting myths and stories from local shrines. It was during this time that he happened upon an exhibition of kagura masks and immediately sought out someone to teach him how to make them.

For more than three years he studied the basics under the tutelage of master mask maker Saburo Ando, eventually adding his own creative slant to his works, which didn't always go down well with his fellow students.

"As you would expect, they followed the teacher's word to the letter, but I wanted to express myself," says Davies, an artist and photographer who majored in print making at university. "But while they told me it would be disrespectful to not follow sensei's instruction, Ando himself encouraged me. Overall, refining an original style is more challenging than the making process itself."

That production process, he says, is relatively simple — a "glorified form of papier-mache" he calls it — even though each mask can take up to a month to complete.

First, a clay mold is made onto which is pasted a special, locally produced paper called sekishu-washi — an Important National Intangible Asset from Sekishu, the ancient name for Iwami — that is also used to repair medieval drawings in Venice, Italy.

On top of that is painted a mixture of ground seashell and horse hoof glue, which is left to dry, sanded to a smooth finish and then the process repeated a further six to seven times. Then the clay mold is smashed, leaving a blank mask to which is added pigments, gold leaf, charcoal for subtle shading, varnish and real hair to create a vast array of characters that appear in kagura performances.

The key to these masks is their scope for a wide variety of expressions and minimal weight, Davies says.

"Iwami-kagura costumes are elaborate and can weigh up to 60 kg. This, coupled with the sheer speed of the dance, forced Iwami mask makers more than a century ago to devise a way to produce ultralight masks, which led to the method of clay molds and masks made from very thin, but strong, paper."

Davies' originality and eye for detail has gained him a decent clientele, enough to encourage him to build a studio in his home with an eye to developing his mask making into a more serious business.

And for that he needs new ideas and fresh faces, which he discovers at the dozens of kagura events he attends each year, among them performances of omoto-kagura, possessive rituals that were supposed to have been wiped out under government policy during the Meiji Era but somehow survived in one area in Shimane.

"Around here is the only place in all of Japan where true shamanic, possessive kagura survives," he says. "People really know their kagura in these parts, but the populations are dwindling and so are successors to these priceless customs. My goal is to help ensure they never die out."

(C) The Japan Times
__________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: Doctors misuse scans in prostate cancer, says study

NEW YORK, NY / Reuters Health / August 26, 2011

By Genevra Pittman

Too many men with low- or medium-risk prostate cancer get CTs and bone scans that aren't recommended for them, suggests a new study.

The scans are intended to tell doctors if cancer has spread beyond the prostate in men with high-risk cancer.

Doing them in other cases is a concern because CTs expose patients to small amounts of radiation -- which itself is linked to future cancer risks -- and the scans cost the healthcare system extra money, but have little potential benefit.

The research also suggests that not enough men with high-risk cancer get the scans, which means some of them may get treatment for local (confined to the prostate) cancer that's unlikely to help if the cancer has spread.

"In high-risk patients, those are the ones that have a high risk of positive lymph nodes or (cancer that has) spread to the bone," said Dr. David Samadi, a prostate cancer surgeon at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York who was not involved in the new study.

"Otherwise for low-risk disease, the likelihood of finding a positive bone scan or CT scan is low," he told Reuters Health.

Guidelines from the American Urological Association say that doctors should use other measures such as prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing to determine a man's risk of advanced cancer and then only scan those with high-risk disease to determine the best treatment.

Researchers led by Dr. Jim Hu of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston wanted to see how frequently those recommendations were being followed.

They consulted a database of U.S. men covered by Medicare who were diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2004 and 2005 -- a total of 30,000 cases.

Both bone scans and CTs were more common in men who were diagnosed with high-risk cancer.

Sixty percent of those men had one of the scans. Still, one-third of men with low-risk cancer and almost half of those with medium-risk cancer had a scan in between diagnosis and treatment.

Hu and colleagues calculated that the cost of unnecessary scans in men with low- and medium-risk cancer billed to Medicare during those two years was about $3.6 million for their study group. (The government-run insurance program paid an average of $226 for each bone scan and $407 for a CT).

Extra scanning not recommended by guidelines "significantly increases Medicare expenditure without improving quality of care rendered for men with newly diagnosed prostate cancer," the authors wrote in the journal Cancer.

And each extra CT scan exposes men to a small amount of radiation, while also providing an opportunity for doctors to catch something "incidental" that may not pose a threat but still leads to more testing or procedures, Samadi said.

Another recent study found that coaching and feedback from peers about the proper use of the tests helped prostate surgeons reduce the number of unnecessary scans they ordered. Samadi thinks many doctors are just trying to be on the safe side by ordering more tests.

"A lot of it has to do with the fact that most urologists when they think of prostate cancer it's almost like a knee-jerk reaction -- automatically they think bone scan and CT scan," Samadi said.

The researchers noted that finding four in 10 men with high-risk cancer aren't getting a scan is also "worrisome."

If doctors don't recognize that cancer has spread in some of those men, they said, they won't benefit from treatment directed just at the prostate.

Copyright: Thomson Reuters
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 26, 2011

RUSSIA: Russia to Increase Retirement Age to 65

OSWEGO, Illinois / Retirement Planning Magazine / Retirement News / August 25, 2011

By Hubert Ian Wright


According to Sergei Shatalov, who is the deputy finance minister of Russia, they will raise the retirement age gradually until it reaches 65 years old. Increasing the retirement age has been a common option in Russia and was heavily discussed over the past few years starting ten years ago. Compared to the retirement age of other countries in Europe, Russia’s retirement age is among the lowest, with men given the right to retire by age 60 and women at the age of 55.


Shatalov mentioned in an interview last Tuesday with Echo Moskvy, that all kinds of employees in Russia, whether cosmonauts or pilots, lumberjacks or miners, among many others, will have to deal with a new age for retirement. Furthermore, he stated that this process will be a gradual, step by step process, which starts by adding perhaps half a year increase in retirement per year, or even a third of a year, so that in fifteen years the retirement age in Russia will already be 65 years old.

It is made gradual because this process is quite difficult and those involved should be able to enter the right frame of mind to accept this change. The motivation for this change is to help Russia deal with the increasing budget deficit found in the pension fund in the country, which is being dealt by two percent of its GDP. Increasing retirement age will help lower this figure and give a thirty percent increase in the average monthly pension. The average life expectancy of men in Russia, on the other hand, is just 63 years old.

Source: Retirement Planning
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: Great-grandmother, 83, spends £5,000 on breast implants

LONDON, England / The Daily Mirror / News / August 26, 2011


Marie Kolstad (Pic: Stephanie Diani/The New York Times / Eyevine)

An 83-year-old great-grandmother has splashed out nearly £5,000 on breast implants.

Widower Marie Kolstad decided to plump for the three-hour breast augmentation op and has gone from a 32A to a 36C.

But she knew that her family wouldn't approve of the move and so didn't tell them until the day before her surgery.

The property manager has four children, 13 grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren, and said she went under the knife to improve her self-image.

She said: "Physically, I’m in good health, and I just feel like, why not take advantage of it?

“It’s something you dream about. I just wanted nice ones. I didn’t want anything outlandish or out of place. Now, they are firmer and rounder.

“My mother lived a long time, and I’m just taking it for granted that that will happen to me. And I want my children to be proud of what I look like.

“It was more about looking in the mirror and liking who I am. This seemed like a simple way to go and I didn’t think it was a big deal.”

Her story echoes a trend among older people to undergo cosmetic surgery, and the doctor who operated on her revealed he has other patients who are even older than Marie.

New York plastic surgeon Dr Norman Rowe said: “People say, just because my life age is 84, doesn’t mean I have to be happy or content looking 80.

“The whole population is getting older. People in their 40s and 50s are now in their 60s and 70s getting things done. Americans are ageing and their length of life is increasing.”

Marie has been given a new lease of life thanks to the implants, and is now showing off her new look in a bikini on holiday in Hawaii.

Source: mirror.co.uk
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

Seniors World Chronicle's Fascinating Face of Aging - August 26, 2011


People get happier and experience a greater sense of well-being
as they grow older, said a report in PSYCHOLOGY TODAY. This
photograph accompanied that report. AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen
of Pakistan.
__________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

CANADA: When Seniors Make Mistakes, Are They Learning From It?

SAINT CANNAT, Bouche-du-Rhone, France / French Tribune / August 25, 2011

By Annabelle Tautou


Learning from mistakes is the thing that applies to kids and seniors as well, revealed a latest research.

A new study conducted at Baycrest, a Toronto-based research centre revealed that seniors learn better from their mistakes. The new research is in contrast of the earlier beliefs that mistakes were a barrier in elderly people’s learning process. This Canadian research studied the relation of Ageing with trial-and-error learning and passive learning and came to conclusion that the former method is more effective in adult learning.

Andree-Ann Cyr, Lead Researcher said, “Making a lot of effort or being very active when you're trying to remember something is better than being passive and just hearing the information”.

The research involved both the young and the old people ageing 20 to 70. The elderly people showed better response to ‘trial and error methods’ when compared with the younger ones. The response of older people was 2.5 times more than the younger ones.

Cyr believes that this maybe because of the reduced memory abilities in the elder people. The mistakes and errors make a big impression on the memory than some random theory.

The study was published in the online edition of Psychology and Aging.

© 2010 FrenchTribune
______________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 25, 2011

USA: How to fight a frazzled mind

CAMBRIDGE, England / ScientificAmerican / Science News / August 25, 2011

Stress management is both trainable and beneficial, writes Robert Epstein in this month’s Scientific American Mind. Furthermore, preventive and proactive approaches seem to be the most effective when it comes to dealing with stress.

Previous research indicates that there are at least four broad, trainable competencies that can help people to manage stress effectively: source management (reducing or eliminating the sources of stress); practicing relaxation techniques, such as yoga; thought management (correcting irrational thinking and reinterpreting events in a positive light); and prevention (planning and conducting your life to avoid sources of stress).

Epstein assessed the relative importance of these by conducting an online test of 3,304 individuals. Participants were asked how stressed and how generally happy they were, and whether they had received formal stress-management training. They were then asked questions about different practices that fall under the four competencies.

Relaxation techniques and thought management are often thought to be the most effective ways to deal with stress, but Epstein’s study found that prevention was the most helpful competency, followed by source management.

The results also suggest that people who have received stress-management training cope better with stress than those who haven’t.

The challenge now, writes Epstein, is “to teach techniques for managing stress to a public that knows little about them, and, especially, to educate our children before the big stressors hit.”

Source: Scientific American
__________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: 98-year-old is first woman to earn judo black-belt

INDIANAPOLIS / Monsters and Critics / US News / August 25, 2011

By Elisabeth Gruender

San Francisco - She is 98 years old, not even five feet tall, weighs 100 pounds, and could bring most men to their knees with one simple movement of her hand.

Keiko Fukuda has now achieved in her old age what no other woman has achieved before her. The Japanese-born lady has been awarded the highest judo-title, the tenth master belt (Dan).

Fukuda says she couldn't have imagined it, 'not even once.'

Photo courtesy: The Daily Mail, UK
The distinction could be a step to more equality of the genders in a sport that has traditionally been characterized as a men's martial art.

Fukuda has not been competing for many years now, but that doesn't hold her from overseeing training three times a week at Dojo in San Francisco's Noe Valley.

Fukuda-shihan, a title indicating respect for a great master, enters the small training room with careful mini-steps and supported by two helpers. Judo students promptly interrupt their warm-up exercises to greet the master with a deep bow, a look of awe written on their faces.

The master takes a seat next to an oversized black-and-white photo of judo-founder Jigoro Kano, who gazes down at the panting women-in-training with a strict look.

Fukuda owes it to him that she started judo in 1935. Fukuda's grandfather was one of the last samurai of Japan's feudal period and Kano's first teacher of martial arts. Kano invited the young Fukuda to start training out of respect and gratitude for his teacher.

Fukuda, then 22 years old, was shocked, since till then she had been educated only in calligraphy and tea ceremonies.

'There I saw women throwing one another over their shoulders, while spreading their legs,' she recalls. 'I just thought, 'these women are not properly behaved'.'

But then she attended class herself.

'In the beginning I did it not out of personal joy, but out of a sense of duty towards my family and my grandfather.' Marriage was out of the question for her from then on.

Fukuda was invited by judo clubs in 1953 and again in 1966 to hold seminars at universities in California, teaching what at the time was a less well-known martial art.

After her second visit, she stayed in the US, where there were more opportunities to teach judo to women than in Japan, says Fukuda. Since then she teaches in San Francisco, as the only living student of Kano.

Her students appreciate her choice.

'After completing my engineering degree, I wanted to move away from San Francisco. But then I decided to stay here and learn from Fukuda-shihan. She is the final living link. It would be nonsense not to take this opportunity,' says 34-year-old Nav.

Two new students are thrilled after their first judo lesson with the master.

'She is an inspiring teacher full of knowledge, and nevertheless remains humble,' says Ema, who found out about Fukuda through a newspaper article.

© 2003 - 2010 by Monsters and Critics.com
____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

UK: Wisdom comes with age, study shows

LONDON, England / The Telegraph / Health / August 25, 2011

ELDER HEALTH
Wisdom really does come with age, according to a study which shows older people make better decisions than young adults who are too impulsive.


Older people's wisdom helped them outperform younger participants at
taking the bigger picture into account Photo: GETTY

__________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

CHINA: Family Ties

SHANGHAI / The Shanghai Daily / Gallery / August 25, 2011

The 88-year-old Zheng Chensui (left) changes the laces on a pair of canvas shoes at his home in a mountainous area in southeastern Fujian Province, where he lives with his two adopted daughters. Zheng Jingyu (right), is helping her sister, Zheng Xiaomei, who suffers from cerebral palsy, fasten a button. The family of three get by on 120 yuan (US$18.7) a month each, the rural lowest income insurance. Xinhua

Copyright © 2001-2011 Shanghai Daily Publishing House
__________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

August 24, 2011

GERMANY: German Humour Is Dead

PARIS, France / PressEurop / Culture & Ideas / August 24, 2011

“Thanks for the laughter”


With that farewell, the German tabloid Bild laments the passing at the age of 87 of “the Goethe of laughter,” comedian Vicco von Bülow, known by his stage name Loriot. The actor who in his sketches, comedy shows and feature films never stopped making fun of the foibles of the Germans as they lived and loved and muddled their way through their lives was one of the “greatest” of them all, the newspaper writes. His last wish, Bild writes, quoting his wife, was for “an ice-cold beer.”

“Thank you, Loriot”, leads Die Welt, thanking the humorist for having shown, with “universal tenderness”, the weaknesses of people and especially that German strain, “at times meticulous and often stubborn.... Today there are clowns and comedians everywhere, but no humorist...

The Germans’ appreciation of Vicco von Bülow and his work will be passed down to future generations – and why not his own words, which ring even more true today:
‘Please, don’t say a thing!’”

Copyright 2009 Presseurop.eu ____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: W. B. Kannel, Who Led Historic Heart Study, Dies at 87

NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / Health / August 24, 2011

W. B. Kannel, Who Led Historic Heart Study, Dies at 87

By Margalit Fox


William B. Kannel, a cardiovascular epidemiologist whose work helped to identify and sought to rout the culprits behind heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular diseases, died on Saturday in Natick, Mass. He was 87.

William B. Kannel Suzanne Kreiter/The Boston Globe

The cause was cancer, his family said. At his death, Dr. Kannel was emeritus professor of medicine and public health at the Boston University School of Medicine.

Dr. Kannel (pronounced CAN-nell) was a former director of the Framingham Heart Study, the longest and most comprehensive study of the American heart ever undertaken.

Started in 1948, and continuing to this day, it followed an initial group of more than 5,000 Framingham, Mass., residents over many years. Its aim was to determine the causes of cardiovascular disease, which at midcentury was epidemic but poorly understood.

Begun by the United States Public Health Service, the study was transferred to the National Heart Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, in 1949. Today, it is run collaboratively by Boston University and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, which succeeded the National Heart Institute.

Dr. Kannel joined the Framingham study in the early 1950s, serving as its director from 1966 to 1979. Afterward he was a principal investigator on the study and remained involved with it until nearly the end of his life.

Before the Framingham study, the words “cardiovascular,” “epidemiology” and “prevention” were unaccustomed bedfellows. Heart attacks and strokes were largely seen as tragic inevitabilities, thunderbolts that could rarely be predicted or prevented. Their scientific study was generally a post-hoc — often a post-mortem — affair.

The Framingham study asked two novel questions: For whom exactly was cardiovascular disease inevitable, and did it have to be quite as inevitable as it was? The study’s findings — which have informed more than 1,200 research papers — are credited with altering the way doctors and patients think about cardiovascular disease.

Among the social transformations attributed to the study is today’s heightened awareness of the importance of lifestyle changes like healthy eating, exercising and quitting smoking in reducing the risk of such disease.

From its inception, the Framingham study was unusual. For one thing, epidemiological studies had until then been the province of infectious-disease research. For another, where earlier clinical research had looked at patients who had already suffered heart attacks or strokes, this study admitted only healthy adults.

Subjects were given extensive medical exams every two years; should one of them have a heart attack or stroke later on, its underlying causes would already have been well documented.

“This type of study is a waiting game,” Dr. Kannel said in an oral history interview with PBS in 2006. “You make measurements of the characteristics of the people you’re following and then wait for them to get sick or not get sick.”

Over time, the Framingham study identified risk factors for cardiovascular disease including obesity, high blood pressure, smoking and lack of exercise. While these factors are common knowledge today, they were noteworthy at the time.

Smoking, for instance, had been known to cause pulmonary ailments like lung cancer and emphysema, but had not previously been implicated in cardiovascular problems.

What was more, the study established that cardiovascular disease most often resulted from a web of interdependencies — various risk factors acting in concert — rather than from one factor acting alone, as had commonly been believed.

Gathering and analyzing data on so many aspects of patients’ medical and social lives was no small trick in the study’s early days.

“We had something like 80 variables to apply to this task and no computers, no copy machines,” Dr. Kannel told PBS. “We were supposed to do this all by hand, using carbon paper and electric typewriters and an abacus for counting and doing statistical analysis. We had a primitive punch-card apparatus that did counting and sorting. The machine that did this was as big as an upright piano. It clanked away for eight hours to count and sort what a computer could now do in two seconds.”

William Bernard Kannel was born in Brooklyn on Dec. 13, 1923. He briefly studied chemical engineering at the City College of New York before his studies there were interrupted by Army service in World War II. He later did premedical study at the University of Florida and earned a degree from the Medical College of Georgia in 1949.

Dr. Kannel joined the United States Public Health Service that year, and remained with the organization until 1979. While working on the Framingham study, he attended the Harvard School of Public Health, receiving a master’s degree there in 1959.

He joined the Framingham study as a protégé of its first director, Thomas R. Dawber. In 1971, under Dr. Kannel’s stewardship, the study was expanded to include its second generation: the original subjects’ children and their spouses.

Dr. Kannel, who lived in South Natick, Mass., and Royal Palm Beach, Fla., is survived by his wife of 69 years, the former Rita Ruth Lefkowitz; two sons, Steven and Scot; two daughters, Linda Isaacson and Patricia Hoffman; 12 grandchildren; and 21 great-grandchildren.

He is also survived by the men and women of the Framingham Heart Study. Now in its third generation, the study follows more than 14,000 people, among them a few hardy, disease-defying members of the original group.

“I think our surviving cohort have been wonderful and deserve all the credit they can get,” Dr. Kannel told PBS in 2006. “It’s now a contest actually between the senior investigators and the cohort to see who will survive longer.”

He added, “I suspect they will.”

© 2011 The New York Times Company
____________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: Many older adults retain their ability to enjoy sex well into old age

SAN DIEGO, California / University of California / August 24, 2011

Sexual Satisfaction Tied to Overall “Successful Aging” as Reported by Women Age 60 to 89

Senior couple kissing. Credit: © Alexander Raths/Dreamstime.com

A study by researchers at the Stein Institute for Research on Aging at the University of California, San Diego finds that successful aging and positive quality of life indicators correlate with sexual satisfaction in older women. The report, published online in the August edition of the Journal of the American Geriatric Society, also shows that self-rated successful aging, quality of life and sexual satisfaction appear to be stable even in the face of declines in physical health of women between the ages of 60 and 89.
The study looked at 1,235 women enrolled at the San Diego site of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study, a major ongoing research program funded by the National Institutes of Health which, since 1993, has addressed causes of death, disability and quality of life in more than 160,000 generally healthy, post-menopausal women.

As the researchers expected, sexual activity and functioning (such things as desire, arousal and ability to climax) were negatively associated with age, as were physical and mental health. However, in contrast to sexual activity and functioning, satisfaction with overall sex life was not significantly different between the three age cohorts studied: age 60 to 69; 70 to 70; and 80 to 89.

Approximately 67 percent, 60 percent, and 61 percent of women in these three age groups, respectively, reported that they were “moderately” to “very satisfied” with their sex lives.

“Contrary to our earlier hypothesis, sexual satisfaction was not significantly associated with age,” said Wesley K. Thompson, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry with the Stein Institute for Research on Aging at the UC San Diego School of Medicine, and co-lead author along with UC San Diego medical student Lindsey Charo, BA. “Although the levels of sexual activity and functioning did vary significantly, depending on the woman’s age, their perceived quality of life, successful aging and sexual satisfaction remained positive.”

Sexual activity was significantly lower in older age cohorts. Of the women who were married or in an intimate relationship, 70 percent of those aged 60 to 69, 57 percent of those aged 70 to 79, and 31 percent of those aged 80 to 89 reported having had some sexual activity in the previous six months. While women who were married or living in an intimate relationship engaged in higher rates of sexual activity than those who were not in such a relationship, sexual activity still decreased across age cohorts.

The findings of this study confirm earlier published research from the UCSD Stein Institute suggesting that self-rated health changes little with age even when objective health indicators show age-associated decline.

“What this study tells us is that many older adults retain their ability to enjoy sex well into old age,” said Thompson. “This is especially true of older adults who maintain a higher level of physical and mental health as they grow older. Furthermore, feeling satisfied with your sex life - whatever your levels of sexual activity - is closely related to your perceived quality of life.” He added that “while we cannot assess cause and effect from this study, these results suggest that maintaining a high level of sexual satisfaction may positively reinforce other psychological aspects of successful aging.”

Additional contributors to the study include Ipsit V. Vahia, MD, Colin Depp, PhD, Matthew Allison, MD, and Dilip V. Jeste, MD, all with the UCSD School of Medicine.

This work was supported, in part, by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Aging. The WHI program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

© 2011 UCSD Medical Center
___________________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

UK: After 50 years of acting Ian McKellen has 'ambition to get better as an actor'

LONDON, England / The Guardian / Culture / August 24, 2011

After 50 years playing everything from Gandalf to gangsters, the beloved 'national institution' explains why acting keeps him sane

By Emine Saner

Ian McKellen in Chichester. Photograph: Helen Maybanks

Next week, it will be 50 years since Sir Ian McKellen first walked out on stage, at the Belgrade theatre in Coventry. "I couldn't believe my luck," he says when I ask him what it felt like. "I had done a lot of theatre-going when I was a kid, which is how I got interested but I had never thought, really, that I would be an actor, it was the sort of thing I would say to adults to stop them asking what I wanted to be when I grew up." Getting a scholarship to Cambridge was what did it, he says. "There were all these people – Derek Jacobi, David Frost, Trevor Nunn – and they were going to go into the theatre. I thought, frankly if they are good enough, I am."

We sit outside on the terrace of the cafe at the smaller Minerva theatre, part of the Chichester festival theatre complex, where McKellen is appearing in Eduardo de Felippo's 1960 play The Syndicate, directed by Sean Mathias, with whom he has worked many times (they also had a long relationship). He demolishes a slice of victoria sponge quicker than I have ever seen anyone do it before, before noticing my chocolate cake. "Are you going to finish that?" he asks. "I've got a waistline to develop." I slide it over to him. How can I say no?

Before I meet McKellen I fear I may love him. He is grand but doesn't take himself seriously, he continues to devote much of his life to campaigning for gay equality, he thinks people who don't live in London should have access to great plays and great actors – just as he did when he was a child, watching John Gielgud on stage in Manchester – which is why he loves going on tour. After Chichester, the company goes to Malvern, then Cambridge, Bath and Milton Keynes. After that, he is back in his wizard robes in New Zealand to film The Hobbit. He had some time off a while ago, thought he might slow down, but didn't really know what to do with himself. Far better to be working.

He plays Don Antonio, a mafia boss who at 75 is haunted by the memory of the person he killed when he was a teenager. "He was whisked off to New York to avoid the courts. He comes back to Naples with all his guns and cunning and ability to organise, and he puts all that at the service of sorting out people's lives in the hope he can stop people killing each other, behaving badly to each other. So he's a Godfather with a twist. I have great faith in it."

Don Antonio emerges in his dressing gown, shadowboxing in a way that is both impressive – he is clearly a man aware of his own power – and sad because the footsteps aren't as light, the punches not as potent. At one point his son says "Seventy-five? You don't look like an old man" – the same can be said for McKellen, three years younger, who today is wearing a fashionable tweed cap and a string of beads around his neck – but mortality is clearly something that weighs on him. Is McKellen aware of getting older? "Oh God," he says with a huge sigh. "If I'm with people of my own age, we talk about it all the time – 'How's your back? So and so's going blind.' You're constantly aware of it. If I have a fall at my age – aaagh!" He throws his hands up. "I did have a fall the other day. I was running for the river bus and it was a bit slippy. I went down, just the day before we started rehearsing. Does that mean I'm going to be in a sling? Have I broken a bone? Things like that. I have got prostate cancer and I have to keep monitoring that. It's no problem, it's under control and I'm very cool about it but other people are dying from it. And the memory – will the time come when I can't remember the lines? So yes, I'm always talking about age."

Is he angry about it? He seems to be. "No!" he almost shouts. "That would be very egotistical, thinking it wasn't appropriate for me to die. But of course, we all think we're immortal a little bit don't we. So working is a way of keeping mortality at bay."

Are there any parts left for McKellen to play? He has been Prospero, Macbeth and Lear. He has done Chekhov, Ibsen and Beckett. And Coronation Street. He has the best wizarding role of all, nominated for his second Oscar for his role as Gandalf in Lord of the Rings. "I would like to do a pantomime again, because I enjoyed that very much," he says when I ask if he has any more ambitions. "We're very lucky, men, that there are these fabulous parts. Women – once you've done all the parts in Shakespeare they start running out. So you can pick and choose and find something to energise you. My ambition is to get better as an actor. I still think there's room for improvement."

I wonder how he copes with the adoration. "Adored?" he says, sounding just surprised enough to make me think he means it. "Am I?" He's a national treasure! He laughs and looks pleased. "It's lovely when someone comes up and says: 'My husband and I saw you in a play, in fact it was our first date,' and I've been a part of their lives without knowing it and they've got a sentimental attachment [to me], as we all do to actors. But I'm only an actor. I'm not a writer. I'm not going to leave any legacy." He pauses. "All I've ever done is learn the lines and say them."

McKellen's campaign work, he says, is "the good stuff. It was the making of me. It gave my life a purpose. I used to comfort myself when I became an actor that it was a useful job, entertaining people. And it was important to do it as well as you possibly can. But being part of the movement that changed the laws in this country that disadvantaged gay people, that's going to affect people in the future."

He came out relatively late – he was 49 – though it was no secret in his immediate circle. And he is still one of very few officially out Hollywood stars. "I think they put up with me because I'm a foreigner. I'm not a danger. It's a bewilderment really – California is full of mavericks and free thinkers. It has the best lesbian and gay youth centres in the world. There are gay police on the streets of west Hollywood and yet the industry itself is nervous, and that's because it's looking over its shoulder at its audience and its audience doesn't come from Hollywood, it comes from the midwest where it's still not easy to be gay. The battle going on over gay marriage in America reveals an awful lot. The Bible belt – people hate gay people. Because the Bible tells them? No, the Bible tells them an awful lot of things that they ignore."

Over the past couple of years, McKellen has visited more than 50 secondary schools on behalf of Stonewall, the campaign group he co-founded. "It's wonderful," he says. "I've met kids who think they're anti-gay and you talk to them and it turns out they don't know much about it, it's not a subject that is talked about. But [to see] a young gay person who, at 14 knows, and comes out successfully to his parents and family, teachers and friends, it's astonishing. When you hear people saying, 'You shouldn't be talking about homosexuality in schools,' well, if you don't there is going to be another generation of people who are confused, bewildered, suspicious, threatened. These kids aren't threatened by it."

They listen because, well, who wouldn't listen to Gandalf? Did he never wish international fame had come to him earlier? Not at all, he says. "If I had become a well-known film actor and thought, now I must have a film career, that's a very difficult thing to organise. Theatre is relatively easy if you're British – you're living in the theatre capital of the world, London, there are so many places you can work, still. If I had begun to think of myself as a film actor I think I would have got distracted. I'm much happier … it has all worked out wonderfully well. I was way into my 60s so my head was not likely to get swollen. I was just glad to be recognised as being an actor who was succeeding. I liked that side of the acclaim, if that's what you call it. To be a star," he almost spits out the word, "that's never appealed to me really."

Later, in the theatre I wait for the play to start. The woman next to me says she came to see it because she always wanted to see Ian McKellen act, adding gravely: "I don't know how long we'll be able to do that for." But when McKellen takes his bow, he looks as if he couldn't feel more at home anywhere else. As far away from retirement as you can imagine.

The Syndicate is on at the Cambridge Arts Theatre from 29 August, then tours to Bath and Milton Keynes in September

© 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited ______________________________________________________
Credit: Reports and photographs are property of owners of intellectual rights.
Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.