November 30, 2011

NEW ZEALAND: Older people becoming adventurous travellers

WELLINGTON, New Zealand / Waikato Times / Travel / November 30, 2011

World of adventure for older

By Ali Tocker


Coach trips and cups of tea just are not cutting it any more as a holiday choice for older people.

Leaping with llamas or abseiling in Antarctica are more likely to grab the attention of the over-55s, Hamilton company Calder & Lawson Tours says.

"Older people used to fancy a trip to the Gold Coast, but now they want to go to Uzbekistan, Mongolia or Antarctica," general manager Catherine Gerbich said.

TRAVEL TREASURES: Anne Fredrickson, who is in her 70s, with mementoes from her overseas adventures. Mrs Fredrickson is among an increasing number of older travellers. Katrina Bieleski/Fairfax NZ

"They're becoming more and more adventurous, and demanding things out of the ordinary. Eighty is the new 60," she said.

Tours have been adjusted to accommodate changing demand, and now include places like Uzbekistan, Borneo, Yunnan and Tibet.

"People aren't just looking at new destinations, but also at new ways of travel," Miss Gerbich said. "We used to offer only coach tours of China and Italy, but people said they wanted to get out of the bus more – so we started offering walking tours as well."

Options include travelling by bicycle in Vietnam and Cambodia; by working cargo ship around the Marquesas Islands or by clipper ship in the Arctic Circle.

Initially, the company offered one walking tour a year to destinations like Western Australia. By 2012, about 30 per cent of the company's options will be either walking tours or visits to such countries as Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan.

Older people's travel preferences were changing for a range of reasons, Miss Gerbich said.

Different regions were more accessible with more flights, and better nutrition was contributing to a longer life.

"There's an awareness among people you have to keep moving and learning to stay young. People are realising life doesn't finish at retirement age. They are going out and searching for things to do to keep their minds active," she said.

When older people returned from an adventure holiday, many were soon looking for their next adventure, Miss Gerbich said.

"We have people on our Yunnan and Tibet tour looking at the Azerbaijan tour or Antarctica."

Most of the company's tour guides ranged in age from their 50s to their 70s.

E-Mail: ali.tocker@waikatotimes.co.nz

© 2011 Fairfax New Zealand Limited

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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: Do we need an age limit for emperors who now serve for life?

TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / News / November 30, 2011

Honoring the fallen: Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko offer flowers Tuesday at a memorial service in Tokyo for firefighters who died on duty in the past year. KYODO

Prince cites age limit for emperors


Prince Akishino, who turns 46 on Wednesday, has said it will become necessary to hold a public debate on whether an age limit is needed for emperors, who currently serve for life.

The youngest son of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko made the remark at a news conference he held together with his wife, Princess Kiko, 45, ahead of his birthday.

The 77-year-old Emperor resumed his official duties Tuesday after being hospitalized for 19 days this month for bronchial pneumonia.

Introducing a retirement age for emperors is "one idea" and "discussions should be held including at what age to draw the line," he said, noting that the aging speed differs depending on the individual.

Under the 1947 Imperial House Law, the next male in line ascends the Chrysanthemum Throne upon an emperor's death. Emperor Akihito's eldest son, Crown Prince Naruhito, currently ranks first in line to the throne, followed by Prince Akishino.

Looking back on events in the last year, including the March 11 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis, Prince Akishino said his father, who turns 78 on Dec. 23, was particularly busy with official duties.

The prince noted the need for the Imperial Household Agency and doctors to cooperate and be flexible to reduce the heavy burden on his father, who was discharged from the University of Tokyo Hospital last Thursday.

On recent reports that the government is looking into the possibility of allowing women to retain their Imperial status and set up a new royal family after marriage, the prince said it is up to the Diet to discuss systemic reform, but reiterated his call for listening to him and his elder brother in the course of the discussions.

The idea has emerged as there are currently only a few males who are eligible to ascend the throne. Prince Akishino's 5-year-old son, Prince Hisahito, is now the sole heir eligible to succeed to the throne in his generation.

(C) The Japan Times
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November 29, 2011

KENYA: Wangari Muta Maathai Has Died at 71 - The Trees Will Mourn

LAKE OSWEGO, Oregon / The Elder Storytelling Place / TimeGoesBy.net / November 29, 2011












Wangari Maathai in 2005 in South Africa's Newlands Forest. Nic Bothma/European Pressphoto
Courtesy: The New York Times

Wangari Muta Maathai Has Died at 71 and the Trees Will Mourn

By Jacqueline Herships of The Little Old Lady Stays Put

For various reasons which I am finally beginning to understand, I’ve been more of a hider than a doer in life. But during the last 10 years I’ve been coming out of my shell - poking around to see what’s going on - and I have become a sort of explorer. Amazing people are everywhere and it is becoming my great joy to meet them and to write about them.

And so, several years ago when I learned about environmental leader, Wangari Maathai, from an environmentalist friend, I went to hear her speak at the Museum of Natural History in New York City.

I never actually met her, but seeing her and hearing her discuss her life and ideas was more than enough to make a huge impression on me.

Wangari was born in 1940, in Nyeri, Kenya, one month less than a year before I was born here in the USA.

Her home was near a stream and a wood lot. As a girl, she would go to the stream to get water for her mother for cooking and drinking. The wood lot provided fuel for cooking and heat.

I grew up in the U.S. in what was referred to as the comfortable middle class. We lived in a solidly built house with running water and piped in gas, big enough to shelter a large extended African family but not regarded as particularly large in my town.

During this period, tremendous changes were occurring worldwide. In the U.S., small farms and woods were being swallowed up by subdivisions, urban sprawl and agri-businesses. Wangari’s wood lot disappeared into a coffee plantation. The stream from which they drank was first poisoned and then went dry.

While women in Kenya were increasingly struggling to find water fit to drink and chopping down the last bits of wood that remained to cook their increasingly meager meals, foods from around the world appeared in ever-greater variety in our supermarkets. Chefs drizzled their creations with obscure ingredients which would have tantalized Nero in another age.

Wangari was not the first to notice the connection between the disappearance of trees and the disappearance of clean water but she was the first to introduce that insight to the disempowered Kenyan women whom she knew and the first to urge them to respond by planting new trees.

For her efforts, she was reviled, beaten, jailed but ultimately honored throughout the world as a Nobel Peace laureate because she focused the attention of the humblest to the most powerful on the connection between trees, food, water and war.

We humans have tended to view history as a description of war and conquest, or at least that was how I experienced it in school. Histories were tedious lists of battles won and lost – the humans involved seemed secondary at best – the significance of cultures was not yet appreciated at all. Only recently have we noticed the causes of war which transcend battle strategies and the lust for power, such as the need for natural resources, food and water.

What does this have to do with Little Old Ladies? Just this: Society cannot be expected to support its weak and aged if it cannot feed itself. In the current atmosphere of senior citizen as dim wit, many of us who are strong and capable have abdicated our roles as wise and experienced teachers and leaders. I think we are afraid that if we speak up, others will notice that we are old and we will be dismissed, maybe even thrown overboard.

But there is much to do and it is up to everyone to do it – even old people, even senior citizens, even us. Africa and the third world are not so far away anymore. The problems they deal with on a daily basis have come to us now, too, in the form of pollution, deforestation, encroaching desertification, growing climate change.

I began blogging at the age of 70 because I thought it would help me in my struggle to figure out what’s next for me as I get old. At the time, I was thinking about income, health care, Medicare, housing - things like that. But I am already half way to 71 and although those subjects are still on the list, so far I find myself more drawn to people and places – among them special people who have crossed my path and who are using (or have used) their lives in ways that are worthwhile and wonderful to me. People like Wangari. I believe I am looking for teachers.

Wangari Maathai was a charming speaker. She told us that every person needs about 22 trees to get the oxygen they require and reminded us that we had better know where our trees are. I could see everyone mentally counting up the trees in their yards. But personally, I had no idea where my trees were. Are they here or are they in the rain forest? It’s a worry.

Wangari died on the 25 September 2011, and I am sad that she is gone before I had a chance to be in her presence again.

© 2011 Ronni Bennett
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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.

PHILIPPINES: Senior citizens warm up opening of food exchange

CITY OF MALOLOS, Bulacan / Philippines Information Agency / November 29, 2011

By Jose Mari M. Garcia

Unfazed by the crisp morning air of the Christmas season, 500 senior citizens flexed their torsos in the recent “Todo Sayaw Todo Galaw, Senior Citizen Humahataw” held at the Brgy. San Juan, Balagtas.

The weekly exercise program was held concurrent with the Saturday opening of the North Food Exchange (NFEx) Tiangge last weekend which sold local agricultural and fisheries products.

Carmen Mina, head of the Municipal Social Welfare and Development Office, said the weekly program is an early Christmas present to the senior citizens of the town who also received prizes and free food.



“The happiness of the grandfathers and grandmothers is overflowing that our gratefulness to Mayor Romy and to NFEx is continuing. We hope that they will continue to love the senior citizens of Balagtas,” said Mina.

The participants went home with prizes from the raffle and bingo programs. Free fishball, delicacies, mineral water, coconut and orange juice were also given to the seniors, according to municipal information officer Rolly Danes.

Mayor Romy Castro said programs for the elderly are available in Balagtas like discount cards and PhilHealth, and they even own an office for the association under the Love ko si Lolo Love ko si Lola, Elderly Project.

“It is inherent to Filipinos to be supportive of our grandfathers and grandmothers so the attention we give to our senior citizens are really at full blast,” said Castro.

Meanwhile, the participants expressed elation over the “Todo Sayaw Todo Galaw, Senior Citizen Humahataw” program where they now regularly meet conducted at the same site in NFEx, touted to be the Divisoria of Central Luzon.

“We are glad that with this program, we get leisure time and the members of the association have the chance to meet. We feel that we are important,” said Abelardo Ramos, president of the Federation of Senior Citizens of Balagtas.

After the program, the participants took time in buying vegetables and seafood which they said were cheaper and fresher than those in public markets.

Copyright © 2005 Philippine Information Agency
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: 90-plus population will quadruple between 2010 and 2050

WASHINGTON, DC / US News & World Report / November 28, 2011

MONEY Retirement

Life after 90
By Emily Brandon


Retired couple laughing together. iStockPhoto


Living to age 90 is a worthy goal Americans are increasingly meeting. The number of people age 90 and older almost tripled from 720,000 people in 1980 to 1.9 million in 2010, according to a new Census Bureau report. And the 90-plus population is expected to more than quadruple between 2010 and 2050. Here's a look at what life is like in the United States after age 90.

[See The 10 Best Places to Retire in 2012.]

More women. Between 2006 and 2008, about three-quarters (74 percent) of the 90-and-older population were women. In 2006, life expectancy at age 65 was 19.7 years for women and 17 years for men. Women also experienced more rapid improvements in life expectancy than men between 1929 and 2006. Over the past eight decades, older women have added almost seven years to their life expectancy, or a 54 percent extension, compared with 5.3 years for men, a 45 percent extension. Among the age 90-and-older population, there are just 35 men for every 100 women. After age 95, there is approximately one man for every four women.

Married men and single women. Most women who make it to age 90 (84 percent) are widows. Only 6.3 percent of women in this age group are married. On the other hand, 43 percent of 90-something men are married and about half are widowers. "Women tend to marry older men. Traditionally, there is a four- to five-year age difference," says Wan He, a Census Bureau demographer and co-author of the report. "When they get to age 90-plus, older men are very difficult to find."

Living alone. Just over a third (37 percent) of people in their 90s live alone. About the same number of people (37 percent) live in a household with family members or unrelated individuals. A quarter of older adults (26 percent) live in institutionalized quarters, such as skilled-nursing facilities. White senior citizens were almost twice as likely to live alone as Asians and Hispanics. And women (40 percent) are more likely than men (30 percent) to live alone, while men (53 percent) live with relatives more often than women (32 percent). Unsurprisingly, an older person's likelihood of living in a nursing home increases sharply with age, growing from 20 percent at ages 90 to 94 to 38 percent at 100 or older.

[See How to Calculate Your Retirement Number.]

Physical limitations. The vast majority (85 percent) of people age 90 and older report having one or more physical limitations, the Census Bureau found. "Disability is associated with aging, but it isn't as inevitable as people thought it would be," says Richard Suzman, director of the National Institute on Aging's behavioral and social research division, which supported the report. "There is a modest fraction of people who claim not to have any disabilities."

The most common limitations include difficulty handling errands alone, such as visiting a doctor's office or shopping (68 percent), difficulty getting around by walking or climbing stairs (66 percent), and difficulty dressing or bathing (46 percent). Some seniors also report cognitive difficulties (40 percent), and difficulty hearing (43 percent) and seeing (26 percent).

There is "a lot of variation in healthy aging, with some facing the expected problems but others aging well," says Howard Friedman, a University of California—Riverside psychology professor and author of The Longevity Project: Surprising Discoveries for Health and Long Life from the Landmark Eight-Decade Study, who is not affiliated with the Census Bureau study.

Low incomes. The annual median personal income for people age 90 and older between 2006 and 2008 was $14,760 (in 2008 inflation-adjusted dollars). Men had significantly higher incomes than women, $20,133 versus $13,580. Some 15 percent of the age 90-and-older population lives in poverty.

Reliance on Social Security. Almost all people age 90 and up (92 percent) receive Social Security income. Social Security makes up almost half (48 percent) of all income for people in this age range. Some 18 percent of 90-somethings also receive traditional pension income.

Universal health coverage. Practically everyone age 90 and older (99 percent) is covered by health insurance provided by Medicare, and 28 percent also received Medicaid benefits in 2008. About 40 percent of the 90-and-older population purchased additional private health insurance coverage from an insurance company. A quarter of these retirees are covered by health insurance provided by a previous employer or union.

[See Wealth Gap Between Young and Old Grows.]

Redefining old age. "Traditionally, the cutoff age for what is considered the 'oldest old' has been age 85," says He. But researchers are considering moving this definition back to age 90. "With a rapidly growing percentage of the older population projected to be 90 and above in 2050, this report provides data for the consideration of moving that yardstick up to 90," says Suzman. "Because of increasing numbers of older people and increases in life expectancy at older ages, the oldest segments of the older population are growing the fastest."

Copyright © 2011 U.S.News & World Report LP
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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: It Could Be Old Age, or It Could Be Low B12

NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / Health / November 28, 2011

Personal Health
By Jane Brody


Yvetta Federova


Ilsa Katz was 85 when her daughter, Vivian Atkins, first noticed that her mother was becoming increasingly confused.

“She couldn’t remember names, where she’d been or what she’d done that day,” Ms. Atkins recalled in an interview. “Initially, I was not too worried. I thought it was part of normal aging. But over time, the confusion and memory problems became more severe and more frequent.”

Her mother couldn’t remember the names of close relatives or what day it was. She thought she was going to work or needed to go downtown, which she never did. And she was often agitated.

A workup at a memory clinic resulted in a diagnosis of early Alzheimer’s disease, and Ms. Katz was prescribed Aricept, which Ms. Atkins said seemed to make matters worse. But the clinic also tested Ms. Katz’s blood level of vitamin B12. It was well below normal, and her doctor thought that could be contributing to her symptoms.

Weekly B12 injections were begun. “Soon afterward, she became less agitated, less confused and her memory was much better,” said Ms. Atkins. “I felt I had my mother back, and she feels a lot better, too.”

Now 87, Ms. Katz still lives alone in Manhattan and feels well enough to refuse outside assistance.

Still, her daughter wondered, “Why aren’t B12 levels checked routinely, particularly in older people?”

It is an important question. As we age, our ability to absorb B12 from food declines, and often so does our consumption of foods rich in this vitamin. A B12 deficiency can creep up without warning and cause a host of confusing symptoms that are likely to be misdiagnosed or ascribed to aging.

A Vital Nutrient

B12 is an essential vitamin with roles throughout the body. It is needed for the development and maintenance of a healthy nervous system, the production of DNA and formation of red blood cells.

A severe B12 deficiency results in anemia, which can be picked up by an ordinary blood test. But the less dramatic symptoms of a B12 deficiency may include muscle weakness, fatigue, shakiness, unsteady gait, incontinence, low blood pressure, depression and other mood disorders, and cognitive problems like poor memory.

Labs differ in what they consider normal, but most authorities say a deficiency occurs when B12 levels in adults fall below 250 picograms per milliliter of blood serum. Like all Bvitamins, B12 is water-soluble, but the body stores extra B12 in the liver and other tissues. Even if dietary sources are inadequate for some time, a serum deficiency may not show up for years.

If the amount of B12 in storage is low to begin with, a deficiency can develop within a year, even more quickly in infants.

Recommended dietary amounts of B12 vary: 2.4 micrograms daily for those age 14 and older, 2.6 micrograms for pregnant women and 2.8 micrograms for nursing women. Barring circumstances that impair B12 absorption, these are levels easily obtained from awell-balanced diet containing animal protein.

In its natural form, B12 is present in significant amounts only in animal foods, most prominently in liver (83 micrograms in a 3.5-ounce serving). Good food sources include other red meats, turkey, fish and shellfish. Lesser amounts of the vitamin are present in dairy products, eggs and chicken.

Those at Risk

Natural plant sources are meager at best in B12, and the vitamin is poorly absorbed from them. Many strict vegetarians and all vegans, as well as infants they breast-feed, must consume supplements or fortified breakfast cereals to get adequate amounts.

Certain organisms, like the bacterium Spirulina and some algae, contain a pseudo-B12 that the body cannot use but may result in a false reading of a normal B12 level on a blood test. Despite claims to the contrary, laver, a seaweed, and barley grass are not reliable sources of B12.

In animal foods, B12 is combined with protein and must be released by stomach acid and an enzyme to be absorbed. Thus, chronic users of acid-suppressing drugs like Prilosec, Prevacid and Nexium, as well as ulcer medications like Pepcid and Tagamet, are at risk of developing a B12 deficiency and often require a daily B12 supplement.

Stomach acid levels decline with age. As many as 30 percent of older people may lack sufficient stomach acid to absorb adequate amounts of B12 from natural sources. Therefore, regular consumption of fortified foods or supplementation with 25 to 100 micrograms of B12 daily is recommended for people over 50.

Synthetic B12, found in supplements and fortified foods, does not depend on stomach acid to be absorbed. But whether natural or synthetic, only some of the B12 consumed gets into the body. Treatment to correct a B12 deficiency typically involves much larger doses than the body actually requires.

Free B12 from both natural and synthetic sources must be combined with a substance in the stomach called intrinsic factor to be absorbed through the gut. This factor is lacking in people with an autoimmune disorder called pernicious anemia; the resulting vitamin deficiency is commonly treated with injections of B12.

Although most doctors are quick to recommend injections to correct a B12 deficiency, considerable evidence indicates that, in large enough doses, sublingual (under-the-tongue) tablets or skin patches of B12 may work as well as injections for people with absorption problems, even for those with pernicious anemia.

Most often, a daily supplement of 2,000 micrograms is recommended for about a month, then lowered to 1,000 micrograms daily for another month, then lowered again to 1,000 micrograms weekly. Sublingual B12 or B12 patches, or even B12 lollipops, can be helpful for people who require a supplement but cannot swallow pills.

Others at risk of developing a B12 deficiency include heavy drinkers (alcohol diminishes B12 absorption), those who have had stomach surgery for weight loss or ulcers, and people who take aminosalicylic acid (for inflammatory bowel disease or tuberculosis) or the diabetes drug metformin (sold as Glucophage and other brands). Patients who take the anticonvulsants phenytoin, phenobarbital or primidone are also at risk.

Large doses of folic acid can mask a B12 deficiency and cause permanent neurological damage if normal levels of B12 are not maintained. Supplements of potassium impair B12 absorption in some people.

Although a B12 deficiency can raise blood levels of the amino acid homocysteine, a risk factor for heart disease and stroke, supplements of B12 have not reduced cardiovascular risk.

And while high homocysteine levels are linked to Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, lowering them with B12 supplements has not been shown to improve cognitive function. However, in one study, among women with a poor dietary intake of B12, supplements of the vitamin significantly slowed the rate of cognitive decline.

© 2011 The New York Times Company
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

JAPAN: Heavy red meat diet poses colon cancer risk



TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / Life in Japan / November 29, 2011

A National Cancer Center team said Monday it has found people who eat large amounts of red meat are at greater risk of colon cancer and is advising consumption of beef and pork be pared.

The team tracked until 2006 the eating habits and cancer risks of some 80,000 men and women who were between the ages of 45 and 74 in the second half of the 1990s, including 788 who developed colon cancer during the tracking period, and divided them into five groups according to their meat consumption.

Women who ate some 80 grams or more of beef and pork daily had a 48 percent higher colon cancer risk than those who consumed less than 25 grams, the team said. The consumption weight is for beef and pork before cooking.

While no similar tendency was found among men, it said, men who ate some 100 grams or more of beef, pork and chicken had a 44 percent higher colon cancer risk than those who consumed less than 35 grams.

(C) The Japan Times____________________________________________________________
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

November 28, 2011

WORLD: The two pillars of the world's future

TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / Opinion / November 28, 2011


The two pillars of the world's future


By YUJI MIYAMOTO
Special to The Japan Times
Our world is about to be transformed. It is too early to tell what changes will come about. Yet, there is a premonition that the future relationship between America and China will set the course for the entire world.
America and China must relate in a manner that is not confrontational and destructive; their relationship must be one that contributes to the harmonious development of the community of mankind. No one will oppose such a conclusion. The question is, how do we realize this goal?
Rapid economic development has caused dramatic changes in Chinese society. China has finally caught up to the point that it now has America in its sight, re-emerging as a world power both in name and substance. The tremendous change that has taken place in China is a sign that its logic and action can no longer be contained within the framework envisioned by Deng Xiaoping, the master architect of modern China. The country has begun to wander in search for a new national image and identity.
Stories that have China taking calculated steps to rule the world based on some grand strategy do not reflect the reality faced by the country. China itself has been unable to reach a conclusion, much less decide on the focus of its search. The debate is on, but has yet to enter a stage of full-blown discussion.
When it comes to economic issues, we can safely say that China sees eye to eye with the rest of us. It is hard to imagine China destroying the existing global economic order from which it has gained maximum benefit. However, geopolitics is another issue altogether. Will mankind remain constrained by the fatalistic view that an economic power will ultimately become a military power, and that an emerging power will inevitably challenge the existing superpower?
I believe there is a way out. Both America and China must escape such fatalism, and I think they can. Once they clearly realize the responsibility and mission they have been entrusted with in the context of human history, the answer will come naturally.
Let us start with China. If it is seeking to create a global geopolitical order "with Chinese characteristics," it follows that China must denounce the hegemonistic approach. After all, hasn't China been the harshest critic of American hegemonistic behavior over the years?
The Way of Might and the Way of Right have their origins in the teachings of Mencius, which describes "one who claims righteousness through might" as a hegemon and "one who exercises right through virtue" as a true ruler (king). These words carry great weight in Chinese values. Any mention of the Way of Right is immediately met with comments that it is premised on the view of a world order that existed hundreds of years ago in East Asia, which pitted the Chinese against barbarians and formed the basis of tribute offering relationships.
This ancient worldview has no place in the present. Today, in a world where America and Europe, India, Russia and Japan have appeared in the same arena, it is impossible to envision China ruling the world as its center in any foreseeable future. Such a worldview is distinctively rooted in culture and civilization. It presupposes a superior culture and civilization on the part of China. While that may come true, it will be an infinitely time consuming process.
China cannot revert to a world order that is hundreds of years old. And that being so, it should come up with a new universal principle and contribute to the development of a global civilization. It is completely acceptable for China to present the Way of Right rooted in its classical thinking as a principle. That would indeed demonstrate the significance of China's rise to power in the history of civilization.
Let us now turn to America. It is my belief that America is destined to contribute to the advancement of global civilization. We should consider America not as an ordinary country but as a "smaller version of the world." Anyone who agrees with the principles championed by America can become its citizen, demonstrate their talents and contribute to social development. It was this capacity to accept and exploit diversity that propelled America into its leadership position in the world.
America is a "melting pot" where people with varied cultural backgrounds combine to create an American culture that has made a considerable impact on global civilization. And the proportion of non-Europeans continues to grow within the American population.
I have always considered America — a smaller version of our world — as a grand "testing ground" for the entire human population on earth. It is a testing ground where diverse peoples coexist, cooperate and create innovation. If this experiment succeeds in America, there is hope that mankind may succeed on a global scale. If it fails, mankind can expect no bright future. America exemplifies the future of mankind.
Such is the position held by America. China meanwhile has a unique civilization dating back thousands of years. These two countries must clearly recognize their grave responsibility to human history, and think and act accordingly. They must share the concept of co-evolution as described by Henry Kissinger — or the principle of learning from each other and evolving together. Japan and the rest of the world should actively participate in this process, because what we are seeking to create is a "global civilization" for the entire world.
Yuji Miyamoto, chairman of Miyamoto Institute of Asian Research, is Japan's former ambassador to China. This article originally appeared in the bulletin of the English-Speaking Union of Japan.

(C) The Japan Times
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

USA: Obesity is increasing throughout the world

CAMBRIDGE, England / ResearchSEA / Novermber 24, 2011

Nature Reviews Cancer link with obesity


Obesity is increasing throughout the world and many studies have shown that this increase is accompanied by an increased risk of developing various types of cancer.

In an Opinion article in the December 2011 issue of Nature Reviews Cancer, Bruce Spiegelman and colleagues discuss the possible mechanisms underlying this worrying connection and the possibilities for therapeutic intervention.

Obesity causes many systemic alterations in the human body and it is widely believed that these changes might promote many types of cancer. For example, obesity modifies inflammation pathways and causes increased levels of adipokines – hormones produced by adipose tissue – and lipids, such as cholesterol, in the blood. 

Additionally, increased levels of insulin, which occurs in type 2 diabetes – another obesity-associated disease – may also promote tumour growth. 

The authors critically assess the impact of these changes on tumour initiation and growth and discuss the important issues that are yet to be resolved that might aid in preventing or treating obesity-linked cancers.

Author contact:
Bruce M. Spiegelman (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA)
E-mail: bruce_spiegelman@dfci.harvard.edu
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MALAYSIA: Elderly go green to stay active

PENANG, Malaysia / The Star / Metro / November 28, 2011

By Aida Ahmad


BEING an octogenarian does not stop environment-conscious Ang Chui Pek from mowing his lawn and tending to his garden.

The 85-year-old retired school headmaster from SS2 Petaling Jaya believes staying physically and mentally active is important for one’s well-being.

“I cut the grass myself as it keeps me active and is a form of exercise. At the same time, I also cut cost when I do these chores myself.

“My wife and I also compost garbage and use it as fertiliser for our fruit trees,” said Ang, whose household is among the 49 households who took part in Petaling Jaya City Council’s (MBPJ) Low-Carbon Green Rebate Assessment Scheme.

Ang has turbine ventilators to help regulate the temperature of his house.
Spending time wisely: Ang composts garbage at home and plants his own fruit trees.

The pilot project, which was kicked off by the council in the middle of the year gives applicants rebates of up to RM500 for incorporating energy-efficient methods or follow a green lifestyle.

Six categories — energy, water, household waste management, transport and biodiversity, were taken into account in the scheme.

Ang took part in the programme under the categories of energy, waste management and biodiversity.

Practices such as composting, using a solar water heater or collecting rain water for washing are considered “green”.

MBPJ One-Stop Centre chief Lee Lih Shyan said the programme promoted the green efforts of residents and rewarded those who incorporated energy-efficient equipment in their homes.

“We would also be carrying a similar project next year to reward house owners who live a green lifestyle,” said Lee during a site visit to the applicants’ homes to evaluate their green efforts.

Accompanying Lee was a team of independent consultants each specialising in waste management, energy, transportation, biodiversity and water consumption.

“After visiting the homes, we will have a meeting on Nov 30 to determine the applicants’ entitlement for the rebates,” added Lee.

Independent evaluator specialising in waste management Dr Theng Lee Chong, who accompanied Lee to 12 houses in SS2, said some residents still needed to grasp the overall concept of energy conservation.

“Although there are many who use solar panels, their electricity bill is still high.

“We will need to integrate new criteria next year to ensure the applicants can achieve the overall green concept.

“In terms of waste management, composting needs to be done properly and people need to segregate their rubbish and use environment-friendly products,” said Theng.

SS2B Rukun Tetangga (RT) chairman Lee Kwee Cheng has planted a variety of fruit trees and herbs in her garden.

She also said she used public transport as much as she could and drove a hybrid car.

Copyright © 1995-2011 Star Publications (M) Bhd ____________________________________________________________
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: Veteran NYPD detective who beat cancer makes last bust before retirement

NEW YORK, NY/ New York Daily News / Crime / November 27, 2011

Nelson Dones, 57, set to retire

By Joe Kemp
New York Daily News

Det. Nelson Dones, 57, made last bust before retirement on Tuesday

A veteran city cop who came back to the force after a tough bout with cancer made one last collar in the Times Square subway station before he retires on Tuesday, police said.

Nelson Dones, 57 — a first-grade detective working with the anti-crime unit for the Transit Manhattan Task Force — helped bust an iPhone thief during an undercover sting operation on the N/Q/R subway platform on Saturday, cops said.

“This is a fitting culmination of an outstanding career,” NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.

Dones and his team were monitoring an undercover detective posing as a straphanger when the bandit swiped the decoy’s iPhone from a backpack pocket about 6 p.m., police said.

As soon as the suspect, Fernando Francis, 26, put the smartphone in the front pocket of his red hoodie, the team of cops swooped in and arrested him, police said.

“More than likely, it is my last collar,” said Dones, a 31-year veteran. “I chose to be active on my last day [on patrol\].”

Francis — who has prior arrests for assault, criminal contempt and weapons possession — was charged with grand larceny and criminal possession of stolen property, cops said.

The NYPD has bolstered the decoy program in recent weeks to combat the spike in subway larcenies, which were up 24% in mid-November. Police believe the uptick is due to the increased use of electronic gadgets by straphangers.

Dones has taken part in more than 100 undercover operations, he said.

“I was very proactive my whole career,” he said. “To end it with an arrest is like putting icing on the cake.”

Dones was diagnosed in 2000 with stage IV lymphoma. The cancer had spread from his lymph nodes to his bone marrow. He survived after a bone marrow transplant from his brother.

He returned to duty in 2005 as a Field Training Officer to mentor young cops, and was later honored in 2010 with the Theodore Roosevelt Award for Continued Service After Severe Medical Hardship.

But he never gave coming back to the force a second thought.

“I wanted to prove to myself that I could still do it after battling cancer,” Dones said.

jkemp@nydailynews.com

© Copyright 2011 NYDailyNews.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.

QATAR: Workshop on care for elderly begins at HMC

DOHA, Qatar / The Peninsula / Life Style / November 28, 2011

Enhancing long-term care for the elderly in Qatar, a four-day workshop for health care workers began here yesterday. The intensive study course by Middle East Academy for Medicine of Ageing (MEAMA), at Hamad Medical Corporation, will cover important topics of health-related problems in older people.

The course has brought in physicians, nurses, social workers, and health care officers, responsible for the health care of older people.

“The number of elderly people is growing and they frequently have health-related problems with a mixture of physical, mental, social and behavioural aspects. In the past, these problems were seen only in a few older people and the families were able to take care of their parents or old relatives,” said Dr Prof Palmi V Jonsson, Chief of Geriatrics at Landspitali University Hospital, Reykjavik, Iceland, and a professor of Geriatrics at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Iceland.

“However, societies are changing as a result of the demographic and cultural developments and they face the increasing possibilities of modern medicine. The programme was initiated as part of efforts to have more experts in geriatric medicine,” he said.

The event at HMC focuses on challenges in long term care organisation and management. The course is extended over four weeks in two years adding to a total of 20 working days.

“In Qatar, we define those above the age of 60 as elderly, and currently these people account for three to four percent of our population. However, our current young population will grow old and so we see an exponential growth in the elderly population over the coming years,” said Dr Marwan Ramdan, Consultant- Geriatrician, and Vice Chairman, Department of Geriatrics, HMC.

HMC had the first department for geriatric care in the region in 1994. The department has some 15 physicians and number of paramedics exclusively for the elderly care.

“Here, people are mostly taken care at home, but there are some cases that need to taken care at hospitals. Also the government here gives special provisions for the elderly, by supplying them salary to have sevants, giving equipments as wheel chair and also free home casre services,” he said.

Copyright © 2010 Peninsula News Paper
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

November 27, 2011

ASIA: Indonesian men top latest "Ideal Sex in Asia Survey"

BANGKOK, Thailand / The Nation / Survey / November 25, 2011

Indonesian men top the list when it comes to frequency of sexual intercourse, according to a survey conducted among sexuallyactive people in 10 Asian territories.

Conducted by Pfizer, the latest "Ideal Sex in Asia Survey" found Indonesian men had sex 9.8 times each month on average. Coming in second were Filipino men, who had sex 9.4 times a month, while Indian men averaged 8.8 times each month.

As for Thai men, they had sex about 7.7 times in one month.

The findings of the survey were released at a Bangkok hotel yesterday. The survey covered 1,658 men and 1,624 women in China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand. All respondents were between 31 and 74 years old, and had sexual intercourse in the past 12 months.

As for female respondents, Indian women reported the highest frequency of sexual intercourse at 8.7 times each month on average. Coming in next were Indonesian and Malaysian women, both having sex about 6.8 times in a month.

Thai women had sex just 5.7 times in one month, according to the survey.

Assoc Prof Dr George Lee, consultant urological surgeon at Monash University in Kuala Lumpur, said the survey found erection hardness remained a key factor for sex satisfaction among most Asians.

"For example, up to 90 per cent of Malaysian men have listed this factor as important," he said.

Only onethird of the respondents felt that sexualintercourse duration as an important factor when it came to satisfaction.

Asst Prof Dr Pansak Sugkraroek, a wellknown sexual health expert and obgyn doctor in Thailand, said it was estimated that some 2.7 million Thai men had erectile dysfunction (ED).

"Only 27,000 have come forward to seek treatment though," he said.

Pansak said apart from medicines, the change in lifestyle could also help combat against ED.

"Regular exercise and healthy food are also recommended," he said

(c) 2007 www.nationmultimedia.com
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Seniors World Chronicle, a not-for-profit, serves to chronicle and widen their reach.

MALAYSIA: The aging prostrate

PENANG, Malaysia / The Star / Health / November 27, 2011

AGE WELL
By Tee Shiao Eek

With the expected increase in the numbers of elderly men in the country, certain health issues are going to become even more important.

MALAYSIA, like many other high- and middle-income countries in Asia and around the world, is preparing for the population boom of older people (above aged 65) in this decade.

From the perspective of men’s health, this ageing trend brings about unique challenges as we struggle to maintain the health and well-being of an ageing population. An ageing population riddled with illness and disability will not be constructive for society – socially, or in terms of productivity.

Since 2000, the Malaysian Men’s Health Initiative (MMHI) has recognised that men’s health issues require a dedicated research focus and a multi-disciplinary perspective that takes into consideration the complexity of men’s health.

Over the years, the MMHI has published close to 200 pieces of research work on various aspects of men’s health, including epidemiology, clinical, psychobehavioural and basic science studies.


For the first time, these findings have been compiled into a single publication, Managing Men’s Health: Improving Men’s Health Through Research, written in easy-to-understand language for the benefit of the public, medical and allied health professionals, policymakers, researchers and pharmaceutical companies.

One of the most common prostate problems faced by ageing men is benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), or enlarged prostate. It causes difficulty in urinating, dribbling after urination, or frequent urination, especially at night.

This article is the third in a series highlighting some of the findings from the book, which began with erectile dysfunction and testosterone deficiency syndrome. This week’s article will look at prostate diseases among men in Malaysia.

Prostate diseases in Malaysia

Prostate diseases or lower urinary tract symptoms are quite common among ageing men, but they are also often brushed off as “old man’s problems”.

On the contrary, these lower urinary tract problems, including problems related to storage of urine, urination and post-urination, are not benign issues. There is a known correlation between these prostate diseases and many urological and non-urological conditions, including prostate cancer, urinary tract infections and diabetes.

MMHI’s research into the prevalence of prostate diseases in Malaysia is significant, as it offers a better understanding of men’s overall health risks as they age.

One of the most common prostate problems at this age is benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), or enlarged prostate. It causes difficulty in urinating, dribbling after urination, or frequent urination, especially at night. Some men find that they only have a weak stream and a small amount of urine each time they go, and they still feel the urge to urinate even after they have finished.

Another form of prostate problems is overactive bladder, which is linked to urinary incontinence. Overactive bladder occurs when there is a problem with the bladder storage function, thereby causing a sudden urge to urinate. If you cannot suppress the urge, overactive bladder often leads to involuntary urination.

How common are prostate diseases?

The MMHI looked at the prevalence of prostate diseases in the 2006 Subang Men’s Health Study, and the prevalence of overactive bladder in the 2008 Subang Aging Male (SAM) study.

The 2006 Subang study found that roughly a third of the men who participated suffered from some form of lower urinary tract symptoms.

The SAM study found that 12.7% of the men suffered from overactive bladder. The study also revealed that symptoms of such prostate problems are not trivial and, in fact, reduce men’s quality of life significantly. The participants of the study reported that their physical activity and participation in daily life was limited due to physical and emotional discomfort and stress.

Prostate diseases and other conditions

The findings of both studies were especially instrumental in confirming the disturbing trend of a strong correlation between prostate diseases and certain serious diseases, like metabolic syndrome and erectile dysfunction (ED). These findings are extremely meaningful for physicians and men in Malaysia, as it points towards the imperative to screen men with lower urinary tract symptoms for ED, cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

More information about the link between prostate diseases and chronic conditions can be found in the book.

Future research

In the book, MMHI lays out its plans for future research into prostate diseases, which promises to provide more insight into ways of managing these significant conditions in ageing men.

It is time to change the way we view prostate diseases. They are not merely tiresome side effects of ageing, but important harbingers of other co-morbidities that could affect quality of life and life expectancy among senior men.

‘Managing Men’s Health: Improving Men’s Health Through Research’
can be obtained by writing to perandro@streamyx.com

Copyright © 1995-2011 Star Publications (M) Bhd
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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: Critical care - Spending 10 weeks with patients facing death

TORONTO, Ontario / The Globe and Mail / Health & Fitness / End of Life / November 26, 2011

By Lisa Priest


Harriet Maclean at her partner's bedside in the ICU ward at Sunnybrook Hospital. Rheo Eybel was diagnosed with Glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain tumour. (Moe Doiron/The Globe and Mail)


This is part of the Globe's in-depth series on the agonizing decisions surrounding end-of-life care in the 21st century. For the complete series, click here
Rheo Eybel was singing Brown Eyed Girl, gazing at his own brown-eyed partner on the dance floor. He was trying to ignore the karaoke singer on stage belting out the Van Morrison song – he’d gulped down enough liquid courage to get up and dance, but there wasn’t enough beer in the world to get him in front of a microphone.

MORE RELATED TO THIS STORY


Later that night in July, Mr. Eybel and his girlfriend, Harriet MacLean, walked back to the income property they were renovating that summer in Guelph, Ont., a half-hour north of their home in Fergus.

Mr. Eybel’s neck had started to ache. Whether he had hurt himself working on the house or at his job making truck parts, he couldn’t be sure. But a week later, the legs that had been dancing with abandon were going numb. By the month’s end, he wasn’t feeling a thing when he urinated.

“I knew then,” he said later, “that I was in trouble.”

That trouble was confirmed in a biopsy in Toronto on Aug. 1, when spine surgeon Joel Finkelstein opened Mr. Eybel’s neck to find “the most aggressive tumour possible of the spinal cord.”

And just like that, Mr. Eybel, then 44, faced a death sentence: A glioblastoma had infiltrated his spinal column, rendering him a quadriplegic. There was no effective treatment, no cure.

Placed on a ventilator in the critical-care unit at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Mr. Eybel could not speak, yet decisions on how and where he was to die were being rushed at him with urgency. He had quickly given Ms. MacLean his power of attorney.

The news was devastating. “I don’t know what we’ve done so wrong,” said Ms. MacLean, a straight-talking woman with a blond bob.

Nurse Bill Bisley, with blond spiky hair and a gold hoop in his left ear, tried to comfort her. These events were random tragedies, he told her, not the patients’ faults – he had seen that, in this unit, time and again.

So had everyone in the critical-care centre at Sunnybrook, the hospital with more intensive-care beds – 120 – than any other site in Canada. Here, death is a constant, almost routine event, claiming one in five patients who enter. Yet few who come to units like this have given advance directions, written or verbal, about how they wanted to be cared for in the event of a crisis.

For two-and-a-half months, a Globe and Mail reporter and photographer were granted unique access to one 20-bed unit here. They followed the cases of four patients and their families especially closely, both in the unit and for months afterward: Some had made decisions in advance and others had not, but all faced choices they could hardly have imagined before.

It is an increasingly vital matter for all Canadians. Historically a place for those who’d suffered traumatic injuries, this kind of unit is becoming a more universal place of last chances. Cancer patients, the frail elderly and those with progressive, underlying diseases are going out not with a bang but with the bleep, bleep, bleep of machines – the 21st-century way of death.

Too few of us talk about the consequences of our tendency to seek high-tech interventions, even in the face of Canada’s aging population: How much treatment is too much? When do you withdraw life support – “pull the plug”? And who decides?

“I worry that as we have put medicine out there as a potential saviour and, in fact, almost a new religion over the last 100 years,” said Rob Fowler, one of about 20 critical-care physicians here, “people have increasingly bought what we’ve sold: that cancer can be beaten and every death is a preventable death – that every death is, in some way, a failure.”
© Copyright 2011 The Globe and Mail Inc
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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.