Features for Senior Citizens
Few Senior Citizens are Video Gamers but They are
Most Active of all Adult Gamers
Seniors prefer playing on computer rather than game
console
Jan. 2, 2009 – More than half of American adults
age 18 and older (53%) play video games and, surprisingly, 23% of those
65 and older play these games, according to a recent survey by the Pew
Research Center. It also found 97% of teens play video games.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Can Stay Healthy and Happy With Pets
as Companions
Petting your cat or dog can release the hormone
endorphins that help you feel calm and relaxed
By John Bolt, the Ultimate Dog Lover
Nov. 24, 2008 - Did you think that the old saying
that people with pets live longer and are healthier than those you don’t
was a myth? If so, then you are in for a surprise. Research has shown us
that there are many benefits to owning a pet. It has been proven that a
loyal companion can make your golden years happier and healthier.
Read
more...
Seniors Reminded of How to Decide if Thanksgiving
Pain is Heartburn or Heart Attack
Recognizing the difference could save your life, or
that of someone else at your celebration
Nov. 21, 2008 – You know the drill: join the family
for feasting on a high-fat, carbohydrate-filled meal followed by a
generous slice of pumpkin pie. Regret - brought on by the growing storm
in your stomach - begins before you even make your way to the couch.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Continue as Least Likely Smokers,
More Likely to Quit Than Most
Smoking in US causes 443,000 deaths annually, costs
$193 billion; Great American Smokeout on Nov. 20
Nov.
17, 2008 – The latest statistics on smoking show senior citizens are
much less likely than younger adults to smoke
and they have reduced their percentage of smokers from 1965 slightly
more than the average for all U.S. adults. About 19.8% of U.S. adults
smoke but only 8.3% of seniors are still hooked. The percentage of those
smoking in 1965 compared to 2007 shows a 53.3% decline for all adults
and 53.6% for those age 65 or older.
Read
more...
Facts that May Surprise You About U.S. Veterans on
Their Day in 2008
U.S. Census Bureau comes up with some interesting
facts about military veterans
Nov.
11, 2008 - Veterans Day originated as “Armistice Day” on Nov. 11, 1919,
the first anniversary of the end of World War I. Congress passed a
resolution in 1926 for an annual observance, and Nov. 11 became a
national holiday beginning in 1938. President Dwight D. Eisenhower
signed legislation in 1954 to change the name to Veterans Day as a way
to honor those who served in all American wars.
Read
more...
Hospital Report Cards are Growing on the Web, But Can You Use Them to Make a Choice
May not be perfect, but they can
offer clues to the care you might receive
By Becky Ham, Science Writer, Health Behavior News
Service
Oct. 10, 2008 - Consumers are awash in information
they can use to find the best deals on everything from dishwashers to
car insurance. But is it possible to comparison shop for a hospital?
Read
more...
Gay, Lesbian Senior Citizen Organization to Hear
AARP President at National Conference

Ad campaign |
SAGE launches new ad campaign: "There’s no expiration
date on a full and active life.”
Oct. 7, 2008 – The leading organization for gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender senior citizens kicked off a new
advertising campaign in New York yesterday, and today announced the
program for the Fourth National Conference on LGBT Aging, which will be
sponsored this year by AARP and MetLife.
Read more...
Hi Ho, Hi Ho, It's Back to Work We Go, May Be New
Theme Song for Senior Citizens in U.S.
Current financial crisis may force more baby boomers,
seniors to stay in or join the workforce; it already getting crowed with
these older workers
Sept. 30, 2008 – The collapse of the financial
markets will hit many retired senior citizens – as well as baby boomers
nearing retirement – especially hard as they see their retirement
savings disappear with falling stock prices and failing banks.
Certainly, it raises the prospect that more older Americans will remain
or return to the workforce. SeniorJournal.com has found a recent report
on older workers by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that shows this is
already a booming occurrence – workers 65+ are increasing faster than
the rest of the workforce.
Read more...
Which Cardiac Arrest Patients are Taken to Hospital
Decided by Simple Tests for EMS
New guidelines identify which patients should be
brought to hospitals when emergency efforts to revive them aren’t
working
Sept. 24, 2008 - When someone’s heart suddenly
stops beating – a condition called cardiac arrest -- there’s a lot that
bystanders and ambulance crews can do to get it started again. But if
the victim doesn’t respond, when should such efforts stop? It is a
question of critical importance to senior citizens - the most likely
victims.
Read more...
Senior Citizens in Spain to Gain New Independence
with Mobile Broadband
Qualcomm partners with Spanish Red Cross, Vodafone
España Foundation to form 3G Connecting Generations
Sept.
13, 2008 – An innovative program was introduced in Spain yesterday that
will help the elderly stay connected and interact with their friends and
caregivers. Designed to help senior citizens remain independent and in
their homes longer, it uses a video conference system that works as a TV
monitor, a webcam and a phone with mobile broadband Internet
connectivity (HSPA).
Read more...
Oldest Generations are Most Respected in U.S. but Do
Not Like Their Names
Boomers get higher marks than other generations for
being socially conscious, productive and having a positive effect on
society
Aug. 20, 2008 – Hey, there is news older Americans
can smile about. A new survey by Harris Interactive has found that the
most admired generations in the U.S. are the “Silent Generation,” those
aged 63 to 83, and the “Greatest Generation,” those age 84 or older.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Most Pessimistic in U.S. About
Future of Their Communities
Optimism about communities getting better for
grandchildren fades as Americans age
July 30, 2008 – Senior citizens are by far the most
pessimistic U.S. age group, when asked about the future quality of life
in their communities. A new Harris Poll finds about half of all
Americans think life in their area will be better for their children and
grandchildren, but two-thirds of the oldest Americans say it will get worse.
Read
more...
Cancer Taking Unusual Toll on People in the
Southeastern States, Study Seeks Answers
When looking at brain cancer incidence in the
Southeast lights up in red
July 22, 2008 - The South is known for many things
– hot, steamy summers, iced tea laced with sugar and friendly people
with a tendency to welcome strangers. But beneath the veneer of Southern
hospitality and gracious living lurks a silent killer – cancer.
Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center researchers have their own name for the
southern region of the United States – The Cancer Belt.
Read more...
Don’t Look for Many Senior Citizens to Fire Up the
Grill on July 4
Some interesting facts about the U.S. on Independence
Day 2008
July 1, 2008 - No matter what the subject, when it
comes to polling Americans, senior citizens always stand out as being
different from younger people.
Read
more....
View a senior on YouTube;
win $500 with your own video; good for
getting in shape, says Consumer Reports
June 23, 2008 -
This week marks the 50th anniversary
of the original
Hula Hoop, a toy near and dear
to the hearts - and hips - of both
children and adults, according to
this report from Consumers
Report.
Read more...
Survey Finds Patients Satisfied with Healthcare
Found in Retail Store Health Clinics
Biggest driver of satisfaction is convenience, which
is expected to draw senior citizens
May
23, 2008 – The doc-in-a-box healthcare clinics, usually located in drug
stores or large retail stores with a pharmacy, appear to be popular with
the public. A recent WSJ.com/Harris Interactive health care study has
found 90 percent of patients satisfied with the quality of care. Many
have assumed these will become popular with senior citizens because of
their convenience.
Read
more...
Graying and
Affluent Market is Booming, Warming to Internet Shopping
Targeted market is over age 50 with $50,000 or more in
income
April
8, 2008 - In the more than 80 metropolitan markets surveyed by The Media
Audit, a recent study shows that those who are over age 50 with incomes of
$50,000 or more (the "graying and affluent") have increased from 17.0
million in 2004 to 22.3 million during the past five years. Collectively,
the markets surveyed have an adult population of approximately 142 million,
according to a report in the Research Brief from the Center for Media
Research. Read
more...
Age 75 is the New 65 When It Comes to Cornea
Transplants, Study Finds
Increasing donor pool to age 75 can expand supply
significantly
April 2, 2008 – Age 75 is the new 65, at least as
proven for cornea. The pool of cornea transplant donors - often limited
to those 65 years of age and younger - should be expanded to include
donors up to 75 years of age, according to a study by the National Eye
Institute (NEI) of the National Institutes of Health and published in
the April issue of Ophthalmology.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Rejoice: Spit Tests May Soon Replace
Many Blood Tests, Needle Pricks
Saliva test may make diagnosis, treatment
less costly and invasive
March
25, 2008 - Senior citizens, the most common pin cushions for
blood-sucking needles, will be among the happiest to welcome the
not-too-distant day when patients will spit in a cup, instead of bracing
for a needle prick, when being tested for cancer, heart disease or
diabetes. Replacing blood draws with saliva tests promises to make
disease diagnosis, as well as the tracking of treatment progress, less
invasive and costly.
Read more....
It’s Off to Camp if Seniors Need a New Knee or Other
Joint Replaced
Baylor Medical Center promotes wellness, camaraderie and friendly competition
like summer camp
Feb. 28, 2008 – Senior citizens, who generally
assume their “going-to-camp” days are over, may get a surprise if they
need joint replacement surgery – at least if they seek the help at
Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.
Read more...
Scientists May Be on the Way to a Breathalyzer to
See if You have Cancer
Someday may allow doctors to screen people for diseases
simply by sampling their breath,
Feb. 18, 2008 - Could there be a breathalyzer to find out if you
have a cancer in your body? By blasting a person's breath with laser
light, scientists from the National Institute of Standards and
Technology and the University of Colorado at Boulder have shown that
they can detect molecules that may be markers for diseases like asthma
or cancer. Read
more...
Survey Finds Nations Unhappy with Retirement
Systems; U.S. Pessimistic about Health Care
International poll finds people everywhere unhappy
with way things going
Feb.
13, 2008 – A recent survey of the U.S. and five major European allies
has found a general sense of pessimism about the way things are going,
but the dominant dissatisfaction in all the countries is with the
retirement systems. The survey also found Americans, living in the only
one of the countries without a national health care system, are the most
pessimistic about their country’s health care.
Read more...
Human Embryo Cloned from
Adult Cells is First in World Says Company
Major advancement
towards patient-specific and disease-specific stem cells for
therapeutic use, Stemagen says
What are the ethics? Read below news report
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Human Stem
Cell |
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The beginning of human
stem cell growth - a small human embryonic stem cell colony (highlighted
in yellow) grows on a layer of "feeder cells" that provide critical
support for its continued development. (Images enhanced through specialized microscopes and software
by Stemagen) - click photo for larger view. |
|
Jan. 17, 2008 – The
possibility of developing treatments for Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and
other degenerative diseases using embryonic stem cells took a big leap
forward today. Stemagen, a privately held embryonic stem cell research
company, announced it has become the first in the world to create, and
meticulously document, a cloned human embryo using somatic cell nuclear
transfer (SCNT).
Read more...
Senior Citizens to See High Tech Sensors in Homes,
on Bodies to Monitor Health
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Glucose sensor to be implanted under the skin of diabetics.
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Over 3.4 million seniors to be
using these devices by 2012
Dec. 6, 2007 – Senior citizens who do not take
kindly to high tech devices had better get more comfortable with them
because there is an increasingly good chance they will have them
managing their home and body in the years ahead. A new projection says
that by 2012 more than 3.4 million senior citizens in the U.S. will be
using networked sensor applications to monitor and improve their health.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Should be Concerned with Failure of
Emergency Rooms
Study finds 22,000 preventable deaths occur across
the nation’s emergency departments
Nov. 05, 2007 - Emergency departments across the
nation are failing to meet national goals in treating many heart attack
and pneumonia patients, according to a study by Johns Hopkins
researchers published in the October issue of Academic Emergency
Medicine. Millions of senior citizens, more than any other age group,
depend on EDs for life-saving performance.
Read
more...
Senior Citizens Fear Nursing Home, Loss of
Independence More than Death
Baby boomers fear aging parents will be mistreated
in nursing homes
Oct. 25, 2007 - Senior citizens fear moving into a
nursing home and losing their independence more than death, according to
a research study released today that examines the attitudes and
anxieties of the nation’s elderly population. “Aging in Place in
America,” commissioned by Clarity and The EAR Foundation, also found
baby boomers emotionally distraught about their aging parents' future -
82% fear their parents will be mistreated in a nursing home and 89%
worry their parents will be sad.
Read
more...
Faced with Death, Our Minds Search for Happier
Thoughts
Brain allows us to think about dying without being
paralyzed by fear
Oct. 22, 2007 – How does the human mind process the
inevitability of death? Philosophers and scientists have long been
interested in how the mind handles this devastating situation - both
cognitively and emotionally. One would expect, for example, that
reminders of our mortality - say the sudden death of a loved one - would
throw us into a state of disabling fear of the unknown. But that doesn't
happen. Read
more...
Patients with a Disability or Chronic Disease
Reluctantly Turn to Web for Help
Mostly older people, less likely than others to go online, but once online, are avid
health consumers.
By Susannah Fox, Associate Director
Pew Internet & American Life Project
Oct. 9, 2007 - About a fifth of American adults say
that a disability, handicap, or chronic disease keeps them from
participating fully in work, school, housework, or other activities.
Half (51%) of those living with a disability or chronic disease go
online, compared to 74% of those who report no chronic conditions.
Read more...
Spouses Usually Mirror Each Other's Health Habits
Smokers more than five times more likely to quit
smoking if spouse quit
Oct. 3, 2007- If one spouse exercises, quits
smoking, stops drinking alcohol, receives a flu shot, or undergoes a
cholesterol screening, the other spouse is more likely to do the same,
according to a new study in Health Services Research.
Read more...
Breast Cancer Awareness Month Focuses on Latest
Screening Guidelines
Breast cancer death rate steadily declines and
screening gets much credit
Oct. 1, 2007 – Today begins Breast Cancer Awareness
Month and with the goal of continuing the decline in breast cancer death
rates the emphasis is on increased awareness of the recommended
screening guidelines, since early detection greatly increases chance for
successful treatment.
Read more...
Senior Citizens at Highest Risk of Dying from
Suicide and About Anything Else, Actually
Suicide ranks much higher as cause of death for
younger people
By Tucker Sutherland, editor
| |
Suicide actually ranks 18th in
causes of death for senior citizens... |
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Sept. 19, 2007 – Hundreds of news sources ran the
Associated Press story today highlighting that senior citizens are at
the highest risk of suicide. The rest of the story is, however, that
senior citizens are at the highest risk of dying from about any cause
you can think of, and suicide is way down the list. It ranked 18 in the
top causes of death for the elderly in 2004, but it was the second
leading cause of death for those age 25 to 34. Even for baby boomers it
is somewhere in about 6th place.
Read
more...
Tips for Women Who Fear Mammogram Offered by Female
Breast Surgeon
With breast cancer detected early, chances of
survival are extremely high
Sept. 17, 2007 – Many older women, facing the
annual mammogram, delay or even skip the date because they fear the
discomfort. There are, however, a few simple things a woman can do to
ease any possible discomfort she may feel during this brief imaging
procedure, according to female breast surgeon at a Baylor Regional
Medical Center near Dallas.
Read more...
Most Americans Want to Live by Beach but Senior
Citizens Seem to Want it Most
Older folks pick Oregon as number five state to live
in, others pick Colorado in Harris Poll
Sept. 14, 2007 - Easy access to a beach seems to be
a key factor in deciding which state people would choose to live in if
they moved. Senior citizens, at least those 62 and older, agree with
younger adults on this but add a twist – they are a little more adamant
about being near the beach and possibly want it cooler and more
peaceful. Read
more...
Decline in Divorce May Be Attributed to Aging U.S.
Population
Less divorce happening if a higher percentage of
people are in their older years
Aug. 31, 2007 - Thanks to a seemingly unending
barrage of studies and related media reports, most are familiar with the
widely touted statistic that one in two marriages end in divorce. More
recent data, however, suggests that the widely touted 50/50 ratio is
leaning more in favor of marital success than it once did. Although
exactly why the numbers are shifting in favor of marriage is not
something most researchers can precisely pin down, most seem to agree
that after more than 100 years of rising divorce rates in the U.S., that
number dramatically decreased around 1980.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Most Likely to Say They are Very
Satisfied with Their Lives
But, by far the least likely to say things have
improved or will get better ???
Aug. 17, 2007 – Senior citizens were by far the
most likely to tell a recent Harris Poll that they are “very satisfied”
with the life they lead. Harris calls their oldest age group the
“Matures” and they are people age 62 and older. Sixty-nine percent of
this age group said they were very satisfied with life, while only 56%
of all adults made this choice.
Read more...
States Begin Regulating In-Store Health Clinics Amid
Safety Concerns
American Medical Association initiated concern says
WSJ
Aug. 9, 2007 - More states are looking into the
quality of care offered by clinics in retail locations in response to a
campaign by the
American Medical
Association and physician groups that asked states to
investigate
in-store clinics, the
Wall Street Journal
reports. Read more...
Senior Citizens Provided Helpful Advice on What to
Do on Death of Spouse
Institute on Aging offers free 'Mourning
the Death of a Spouse'
Aug. 1, 2007 – The latest edition to helpful
information for senior citizens from the National Institute on Aging is
Mourning the Death of a Spouse. This new publication provides
useful and practical advice on topics ranging from reactions to death to
taking charge of life again. The brochure covers many facets of mourning
and learning to live without a partner. Read the information below.
Read more...
When Oscar the Cat Jumps in Your Bed You Better Say
Your Prayers
Feline Grim Reaper at nursing home has predicted 25
patient deaths
July 26, 2007 – If Oscar the Cat comes to your
door, you better say your prayers. Since he was adopted as a kitten by
the staff of Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in
Providence, Rhode Island, Oscar has had an uncanny ability to predict
when residents are about to die. So far, he has been right 25 times.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Lead the Nation in Recycling Home
Waste
Harris finds 77% of American adults do some
recycling at home
July 11, 2007 – Now this is something about senior
citizens that may surprise you - a new Harris Polls finds that people
age 62 and older, whom Harris calls the “Matures”, are more likely to
practice recycling than are younger Americans.
Your Spouse Can Pass on Good Health Habits, Study
Shows
In the case of flu shots, a spouse’s influence can
be ‘quite striking’
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
July 10, 2007 - Being a good role model can truly
help a spouse to adopt a healthy lifestyle, finds a study funded by the
National Institute on Aging.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Least Likely to Take a Summer
Vacation, Boomers on the Go
Just over half of American adults will take
vacation this summer
July 10, 2007 – What the Harris Poll calls
“Matures,” which are people age 62 and older, are far less likely than
younger people to take a summer vacation. But, watch out for the Baby
Boomers (those 43 to 61), they will be on the move, according to Harris
Interactive.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Out of Step with Children on Sex,
Marriage, Parenting
Younger generation has different moral values, says
Pew Research
July 5, 2007 - Americans believe that births to
unwed women are a big problem for society, and they take a mixed view at
best of cohabitation without marriage. Yet these two nontraditional
behaviors have become commonplace among younger adults, who have a
different set of moral values from their elders about sex, marriage and
parenthood, a new Pew Research Center Survey finds.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Much More Likely to Fly the U.S.
Flag on July 4: Made in China?
Pew Research looks at patriotism, Census Bureau has
July 4 Facts
July
2, 2007 – It is probably no surprise that more senior citizens will
probably fly the U.S. flag on July 4 than Americans of any other age
group. Overall, 62% of U.S. adults say they display the flag at home, in
the office, or on their car, according to the political values survey
conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press (Dec.
12, 2006-Jan. 9, 2007). However, this number has fallen since August
2002; at that time, less than a year after the 9/11 attacks, 75% said
they displayed the flag.
Read more...
Medical Association Decides Against a Ban on Retail
Health Clinics but Wants Governments to Investigate
AMA to launch own investigations of how
prescriptions are handled
June 26, 2007 – The American Medical Association
delegates decided at their annual meeting yesterday to not call for a
ban on retail health clinics, as many had proposed, nor to set a minimum
age limit for patients allowed to use these walk-in facilities. They
decided, instead, to toss the ball to government officials, requesting
they investigate to see if they are safe for consumers.
Read more...
Docs Not Wanting to Give Shot in the Arm to Booming
Retail Health Clinics
Many at AMA convention want them banned, but is it
the competition
June 25, 2007 – The rapid emergence of in-store
retail health clinics – those little clinics in Wal-Mart, Walgreen and
even local grocery stores, where seniors and others can get walk-in
health care from a health care professional of less than a doctor’s rank
– may not be getting a shot in the arm from physicians. Several doctor
groups at this week’s meeting of the American Medical Association want
these clinics out of business.
Read more...
Pill-Splitting Study Suggests Big Savings for Senior
Citizens
Expensive cholesterol-lowering drugs provide prime
target
June 18, 2007 - Slicing certain pills in half could
slice a hefty amount off of the cost of prescription drugs for senior
citizens. While only some types of pills can be split safely, the
practice could be used by millions of Americans – including many of
those who take popular but expensive cholesterol-lowering drugs.
Read more...
HandiRecords is Handy Checkbook-Size Information
Organizer for Senior Citizens, Caregivers
Necessary
medical, insurance, contact information organized in one easy-to-access
location
May 26, 2007 - HandiRecords, a checkbook-sized
paper organizer, enables senior citizens, baby boomers and caregivers to
easily record, store and communicate critical medical information to
healthcare providers. HandiRecords fits easily into a purse or pocket,
making it accessible and readily available for updating. Its pen and
paper design appeals to users who prefer non-digital storage methods.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Needs Your Vote in ABC News Contest
for Healthiest Woman
BJ Reed, 66, oldest of five finalists has most
online votes so far
May 20, 2007 – When ABC News and Prevention
Magazine set out to use a national contest to find the "healthiest woman
in America," they probably never dreamed that the winner could be a
senior citizen. But, former English teacher, senior citizen and petite
firecracker BJ Reed is one of the five finalists and you can vote for
her online. Read
more...
Senior Citizens Tell Gallup They Favor NBC’s Brian
Williams Among Anchors
Younger age groups like Charles Gibson among 3
network anchors
May 7, 2007 – Senior citizens give Brian Williams
of NBC the highest rating among the news anchors on the tree major
television networks in a recent Gallup Poll. Williams was rated
favorably by 53% of seniors, while Charles Gibson, ABC, was close with a
51% favorable, and Katie Couric, CBS was favorably viewed by only 41%.
Read more...
Here Are Facts for Older Americans Month 2007
Population 65 and older nearing 40 million, more than
12% of Americans
May 1, 2007 - A meeting with the National Council
of Senior Citizens resulted in President Kennedy designating May 1963 as
“Senior Citizens Month,” asking the nation to pay tribute in some way to
older people across the country. In 1980, President Carter’s
proclamation changed the name to “Older Americans Month,” a time to
celebrate those age 65 and older through ceremonies, events and fairs.
Read more...
Wal-Mart to Change Landscape of Healthcare with
Addition of Health Clinics
400 to open in three years, 2,000 in five to seven
years
April 25, 2007 - Wal-Mart intends to contract with
local hospitals and other organizations to open as many as 400 in-store
health clinics over the next two to three years, and if current market
forces continue, up to 2,000 clinics could be in Wal-Mart stores over
the next five to seven years.
Read more...
In-Store Health Clinics Grow as Does Satisfaction
but Not Customers
Survey finds users are well satisfied with the
experience
April 18, 2007 – Health clinics, located in stores
like neighborhood groceries and pharmacies, are growing rapidly in
numbers and have been expected to be well-liked by senior citizens. The
latest facts, however, show that despite the growth in locations, the
percentage of people using these walk-in clinics has actually decreased. But, this survey shows that
those who do are well
satisfied with the experience.
Read more...
Active Recreation Tops Lifestyle Desires for Older
Baby Boomers, Senior Citizens
Del Webb survey finds adventure activities emerging
for active adults
April 13, 2007 – A new survey of lifestyle
interests among a select group of Baby Boomers and senior citizens shows
that active recreation, especially adventurous pursuits, such as hiking
and river rafting, is emerging as a top interest for these older
Americans. It challenges conventional thinking about “senior”
recreation, according to Del Webb, the nation's largest builder of
active adult communities for people over age 54.
Read more...
Most Senior Citizens in England Say Health Good
Despite Long Illness
Two of three live with high blood pressure, 25
percent obese
March 23, 2007 – Nearly two in three senior
citizens – those age 65 and older – in England suffer from high blood
pressure, roughly one in four is obese, and over a quarter of women and
more than a fifth of men have symptoms of depression, according to the
latest Health Survey of England. The survey found wide diversity among
seniors, with many living healthy, active lives, while others face
severe health challenges.
Read more...
Clocks Spring Forward Earlier This Year: Daylight
Savings Starts Sunday
Tips to help senior citizens adjust to clocks
quick jump forward
By Tucker Sutherland, editor
March 5, 2007 – Just when
most of us senior
citizens were getting used to Daylight Savings Time and figuring out how
it works, the government is changing it again. Now, they have decided it
is such a good thing that it should last longer. Get ready to "Spring
Forward" this Sunday, March 11. That means when the clock reaches 2
a.m., it is suddenly 3 a.m. For many seniors, that means a lost hour of
sleep, as our aging bodies don't adjust that quickly.
Read more...
Even After Age 65 Women Are Victims of Partner
Violence, Study Finds
About 25% experience physical, sexual,
psychological violence
March 5, 2007 - About one in four women older than
65 has been the victim of physical, sexual or psychological violence at
the hands of a spouse or other intimate partner, according to a study
done in two northwestern states. About 3.5 percent of the women surveyed had
suffered violence in the past five years, and 2.2 percent in the past
year. Read
more...
Senior Citizens Are Much More 'Trusting' Than
Younger Americans
May have come of age when social mores, events
provided for more social trust
March 1, 2007 - Senior citizens are more trusting
than younger people, says a new poll that, like most others, finds older
people at one end or the other in every comparison of age groups. Social
trust is a belief in the honesty, integrity and reliability of others -
a "faith in people." It's a simple enough concept to describe. But it's
never been easy to figure out who trusts, or why, according to this new
Pew Social Trends Survey.
Read more...
New
Book from Hospice Foundation Dispels Myths about Grief
'...the grieving aren't lovely. The grieving are a pain
in the neck.'
Feb.
21, 2007 - "Grief is such a quiet word; it makes you think of women in black
shawls, silent and lovely. But the grieving aren't lovely. The grieving are
a pain in the neck." So writes Elizabeth Uppman in her essay "A Chunk of
Crystal" in Hospice Foundation of America's (HFA) new book, Living With
Grief: Before and After the Death.
Read more...
Negative Grief Indicators Decline about Six Months
after Death of Loved One
Study of five-stage grieving process finds some
surprises
Feb. 20, 2007 – A study of the five-stage grieving
process following the death of a loved one from natural causes finds
"acceptance" and "yearning" for the deceased are the normal responses of
most people. They also found that "disbelief" was not the initial,
dominant grief indicator as suggested by the accepted five stages of
grief. Read
more...
Options to Broaden Role of Medicare in Long-Term
Care Explored in Georgetown U. Study
By Ellen O’Brien, Health Policy Institute,
Georgetown University
Feb.
18, 2007 - Medicare has contributed substantially to the wellbeing of
the nation’s elderly and people with disabilities. Over the past four
decades, Medicare has helped to improve the health of its beneficiaries
and assure their financial wellbeing. But Medicare also has significant
gaps. Key among them is the fact that Medicare does not pay for
long-term care. Read
more...
Valentines Features for 2007
Senior Citizens Seeking a Partner This Valentine's
Find Few Others Interested
Feb. 14, 2007 - If you are a senior citizens, or
even just age 30 or older, and looking for love on this Valentine's Day,
you best not hold your breath until it happens. Only two percent of
unattached seniors citizens are looking for a partner. Large numbers of
single Americans are not actively looking for relationships and even
significant numbers of those looking for partners are not that active on
the dating scene, says a new report by the Pew Research Center.
Read more...
Features for Senior Citizens
Senior
Journal's Valentine Couple for 2007 are 85, Sharing Love to Fullest
Still staying active in senior-living home in Dallas
Feb. 9, 2007 - They were in their 40s when they
met. He was a painter who had studied at the Corcoran and Brooklyn
Museum schools of art. And he was a framer – a celebrated framer, later
to be declared by Time magazine the best picture framer in the world,
with patents on two designs and frames on pictures that hang at the
White House, the National Portrait Gallery and in other eminent
collections.
Read
more...
A
Real Senior Citizen Valentine
Feb. 13, 2007 - A couple that would be over 5,000 years
old, had they lived, was found by archaeologist near Mantova, Italy. The
skeletal remains clearly show the couple in an embrace. The scientist say,
as a Valentine gift to the world, they will preserve the couple just as they
were found.
Read more at Yahoo.
Facts About Valentine’s Day 2007: Feb. 14
U.S. Census Bureau provides interesting facts about
this day
Feb. 9, 2007 - There are many opinions as to who
was the original Valentine, with the most popular theory that it was a
clergyman who was executed for secretly marrying couples in ancient
Rome. In any event, in 496 A.D., Pope Gelasius set aside Feb. 14 to
honor St. Valentine.
Read more...
Recipe for a Healthy Heart Provided for Valentine's
Day 2007
UCLA Medical Center plans National Heart Failure
Awareness event
Feb. 9, 2007 - With Valentine’s Day just around the
corner, it’s a great time to take a look at the state of your heart and
some tips for a healthier heart.
Read more...
Online Dating Website for Senior Citizens Launches
for Valentine's Day 2007
SinglesOver50.com hopes to help singles seniors
meet other seniors
Feb. 9, 2007 - Just in time for Valentine's Day,
SinglesOver50.com has launched a new website called SinglesOver50.com
which is a new online dating web site for senior citizens.
Read more...
Defibrillators Have Saved 76 Lives on American
Airlines
Senior citizen travel tips offered by flight
attendants for Valentine's
Feb. 9, 2007 - As the country prepares to celebrate
Valentine's during American Heart Month, American Airlines celebrates
the 10-year anniversary of its own heart-health milestone. In 1997,
American Airlines became the first U.S. carrier to equip its aircraft
fleet with Automatic External Defibrillators (AEDs), and this month,
American proudly celebrates the 76 lives it has saved in those ten
years. Read
more...
Deadline Near on Civic Ventures Awards: Cash for
Older Innovators, Honor for Employers
Five $100,000 Purpose Prizes for over 60s who invent
ways to help society
January 11, 2006 – The deadline is February 1 for
two awards by Civic Ventures - the 2007 Purpose Prize, cash
awards for Americans over 60 who are "leading a new age of social
innovation", and the "BreakThrough Award," that will honor nonprofits
and public sector agencies finding innovative ways to hire people over
50 or help them find meaningful jobs solving serious social problems.
Read more...
Slower Growth in Drug Spending Tempers Growth in
Health Expenditures
Health care spending grows at slowest pace since
1999, but nears $2 trillion
January 9, 2007 – A sharp deceleration in Medicaid
drug spending, changes in therapy regimens, tiered copayment benefit
plans, and increased use of generic drugs slowed the rise in
prescription drug spending to 5.8 percent in 2005, a dramatic drop from
8.6 percent in 2004 and from 18.2 percent in 1999. This was a key in
helping temper U.S. health spending growth again in 2005 to the slowest
rate since 1999, the federal government reported today in the journal
Health Affairs.
Read more...
Top Stories in SeniorJournal.com for 2006 Concern
Health and Aging
Nutrition, Alzheimer's and Sex get attention,
too
December 28, 2006 - The two most often read stories
published in SeniorJournal.com during 2006 are both from the Aging
Section. The most popular story reported on new findings about what it
takes for a man to reach age 85, which included that he needs a wife. But, surprisingly, the second most read story was actually
first published in 2005, but still drew thousands of readers this year.
It is a story from the FDA Consumer Magazine on sore feet being a sure
sign of aging. Read
more...
Seniors Look Forward to Time with Friends and Family
in Holiday Season
'Miracle on 34th
Street' top movie for older Americans: Harris Poll
December
6, 2006 – The older we get the more the holiday season becomes about
spending time with family and friends and less about gifts and parties.
In a recent Harris Poll those age 61 and older were the most likely to
say this is what they most look forward to during the holidays. But,
when it comes to getting presents, no one in this age group put it on
their list. What movie do seniors prefer - "Miracle on 34th Street."
And, what animated video do you need to have ready for the grandkids –
women prefer "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer," while the men like "A
Charlie Brown Christmas."
Read more...
Watch for Depression in Older Loved Ones During the
Holidays
Late-life depression is more common that once
believed
By Kara Gavin
December 5, 2006 - So you’re heading home to see
Mom and Dad this holiday season – or maybe Aunt Sue or Grandpa George.
If you’re like many Americans, it may have been weeks, months or even
years since you’ve seen them last. And as they – and you – grow older,
these holiday reunions grow more special each year.
Read more...
Facts About Thanksgiving Day in 2006: U.S. Census
Bureau
November 23, 2006 - What many regard as the
nation’s first Thanksgiving took place in December 1621 as the religious
separatist Pilgrims held a three-day feast to celebrate a bountiful
harvest. It eventually became a national holiday in 1863 when President
Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday of November as a national
day of thanksgiving. Later, President Franklin Roosevelt clarified that
Thanksgiving should always be celebrated on the fourth Thursday of the
month to encourage earlier holiday shopping, never on the occasional
fifth Thursday.
Read more...
Devastating Affect of Cancer Highlighted in New
Study of People with Cancer
USA Today/Kaiser/Harvard survey finds problems
in
health care system
November 21, 2006 - A major national survey of
people affected by cancer provides an in-depth examination of how
families cope with cancer and highlights problems of health insurance
and health care costs through the lens of those who have experienced
this major illness. The results show how health care and health
insurance systems can fail to protect people when they are most in need.
Read
More...
Veterans Day 2006 Features Unique Opportunity to
Hear WW I Survivors Tell Their Stories
Ceremony at National Cemetery; veteran
facts you may not know
November 8, 2006 – There is the national
celebration of Veterans Day at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday,
Nov. 11, but Americans will also have an unusual opportunity to hear 12
of the 14 surviving World War I veterans – all age 105 or older - share
their stories on National Public Radio. More than four million Americans
fought the "war to end all wars" in 1917-18. These veterans share their
reminiscences, humor, and wit in a two-hour radio special hosted by
Walter Cronkite, The World War I Living History Project.
Read more...
New Orleans to Host One of Largest World War II
Gatherings Since the War
Three days of notable presentations by those who
were there
November 7, 2006 – New Orleans will host from Nov.
16 through Nov. 19 what is being called "one of the largest, most
significant World War II gatherings since the end of World War II." The
program, hosted by the National World War II Museum, will feature
presentations by notables, such as, former war correspondent and newsman
Walter Cronkite; WWII bomber pilot and former senator George McGovern;
war correspondents Andy Rooney and Richard C. Hottelet; James Bradley,
author of Flags of Our Fathers; and former Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright, who will discuss the liberation of Eastern Europe;
British author Sir Max Hastings; and noted World War II historian,
Donald L. Miller.
Read more...
Neighborhood Fear Factors May Contribute to Obesity
in Older People
Much higher chance of being obese
living in
worst neighborhoods
By Kelly Griffin, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
November 3, 2006 - Older adults living in disadvantaged urban
neighborhoods have an increased risk of obesity, a new study has found,
possibly due to fear caused by living in areas characterized by crime,
disorder and neglect.
Read more...
Features for Senior Citizens & Baby Boomers
Senior Citizens and Boomer Children Not
Communicating on Critical Issues
New Website will try to connect the
generations, says WellPoint
October 25, 2006 – A new survey joins others in the
past that have highlighted a communications disconnect between senior
citizens and their adult children – primarily baby boomers. Seniors and
their children do not appear to be talking much about important
healthcare and aging topics, although the children think they are. After highlighting these
gaps, WellPoint has decided to make the
solution part of its effort to promote its health insurance. They have
launched a Website to fix the disconnect.
Read more...
Features for Senior Citizens
America's Communities Not Preparing for the Senior
Citizen Population Boom
Survey finds a few
are getting ready
for aging Baby Boomers
October 10, 2006 – As virtually everyone knows, the
Baby Boomers are rolling into their 60s. When the boomer population
bubble peaks in the senior citizen age category, the number of Americans
over age 65 will hit 71.5 million – twice the number as in 2000. But a
recent survey finds that less than half of U.S. communities have begun
planning for this explosion of older Americans.
Read more...
Older People Experience Much Less Stress Than
Younger Americans
Also seniors are much less lonely than any other
age group
October 9, 2006 - We live in a world with many
sources of stress, with many things to do and to worry about, says a new
Harris Poll. These include the pressures of life at work and at home, problems with money, health, loneliness, children and privacy, but when
it comes to senior citizens – at least those 61 and older – these
problems just disappear. Only nine percent of these older Americans say
they experience "a lot of stress," compared to 25% or more of younger
generations. Read
more...
Boomers Using More Drugs, Teens Less but Seniors
Just Don't Do It
Senior citizens do not drink, smoke or use drugs
like young folks
By Tucker Sutherland, editor
September 8, 2006 – The nation's reporters and
editors focused on the increase of drug use by baby boomers and the
decrease among young people – both good leads – but for us it is always
shocking to see how little drug use there is among senior citizens. Not
only to the elderly spurn drugs, they also don't smoke or drink much
alcohol. Below are charts and highlights of the latest report from the
Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration.
Read more...
Cancer Center Teaches Using Aromatherapy to Heal and
Soothe
Oils have properties that affect the
brain, enter the bloodstream
August
25, 2006 - A bubble bath that improves memory – that gets the
attention of most senior citizens. A kitchen cleaner that wards off
nausea and energizes. A scented handkerchief that calms a patient
entering the MRI. The benefits of aromatherapy are real, according to
the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. A cancer specialist shares
her advice on using oils for healing.
Read more...
Senior Citizens May Soon Find Healthcare in their
Pharmacy or Grocery
Retail health clinics expected to mushroom across
the country
August 24, 2006 – It is estimated that retail
clinics – medical clinics that treat common ailments at a lower cost, in
a convenient location and without the long wait for service – will grow
from about 150 today to as many as 10,000 in just a few years. Senior
citizens will soon find them in their neighborhood pharmacy or grocery
store, or beneath a neon sign on the corner. There has been a flood of
news coverage on this mushrooming phenomenon, since CVS Pharmacy
purchased the industry leader, MinuteClinic.
Read
more...
Professor Says much of New Technology Should be
Known as Nana-Technology
Creates term to define technology to improve life for
senior citizens
August 16, 2006 – A recent article in
SeniorJournal.com began with – "For many senior citizens the word
"nanotechnology" probably sounds like something out of Star Wars, which,
however, is also a little new for many seniors. But, nanotechnology will
most likely have a profound impact of the lives of many of people as
they face the challenges of aging." Andrew Carle of George Mason
University, however, has a different cut. He has created a new term – "Nana
Technology," to indicate all new technologies - not just the micro
stuff - that improve quality of life
for senior citizens.
Read more...
New Wheelchair Keeps People on the Move – Even Up
the Stairs
From
FDA Maturity Health Matters
August 14, 2006 - Imagine losing use of your legs
and still being able to function at an eye-level height and climb
stairs. It is possible with a new motorized wheelchair that knows how to
keep its balance. Read
more...
Female Relative Most Often Selected as Medical Proxy
by One-Third of Married People Who Don't Choose Spouse
Advance care planning
is not about documents – it's about people and relationships
July 26, 2006 - One-third of married individuals
choose someone other than their spouse as a surrogate for medical
decision-making. And more often than not, when adult patients chose a
parent, sibling or child, they prefer their mothers, sisters and
daughters to serve as medical proxies over their fathers, brothers and
sons. Read
more...
Blind CEO, Race Car Driver Promotes Business
Communications for the Blind
Sharlyn Ayotte has built a business with seeing-eye
dog by her side
July
21, 2006 - "Blind people are consumers too!" The lady making
the statement has a seeing-eye dog, is a corporate CEO, just competed as
a driver in an auto race for the blind and has spent the last fifteen
years convincing North America's major service industries that it makes
good business sense to address this particular market. Sharlyn Ayotte
lost about 90% of her vision in 1975 as the result of an eye disease,
and is president and chief executive officer of T-Base Communications
Inc. Read more...
Dying Wish – 'Save Social Security, Support
Veterans, Fix Health Care'
WWII Vet, senior citizen, activist leaves unique
request in lieu of flowers
By Tucker Sutherland, editor
July 18, 2006 – "In lieu of flowers: SAVE SOCIAL
SECURITY, SUPPORT VETERANS' BENEFITS, FIX OUR BROKEN HEALTH CARE
SYSTEM!" That is what Romulo A. (Chacho) Munguia asked to be placed in
his obituary that was published today in the San Antonio Express-News.
Read more...
Father's Day on Sunday Does Not Equal Mother's Day
Maybe because there
are 80.5 million moms and only 66.3 million dads
June 16, 2006 – America celebrates Father's Day on
Sunday, as it has since 1910, but it was not made an official national
event until President Lyndon Johnson made the move in 1966 and President
Richard Nixon made it public law in 1972. Mother's Day, on the other
hand, has been celebrated since 1908 and was made official by the
Congress in 1914. Mother's Day has always seemed a more important event
and that is, at least partially, because there are so many more mothers
than fathers. Read
more...
Senior Citizens to Die in Car Crashes at Higher Rate
Older people, women in particular, are more
susceptible to injury than younger people
June 14, 2006 – Senior citizens will die in car
accidents at a higher rate in the years ahead as America’s 75 million
baby boomers age, grow more frail and continue to drive, according to a
new study. Already, seniors age 65 and over are second-most likely to
die in car accidents, after young people aged 15-24, according to a
National Institute on Aging report on America’s elderly, "65+ in the
United States: 2005," released March 9.
Read more...
America Honors Military Dead and Veterans on Monday
Over nine million
veterans are senior citizens
May
27, 2006 - The National Memorial Day Parade will step off at noon Monday
with an Air Force fly over on Constitution Avenue, as America pays tribute
to those who died in military service. The parade will also honor military
veterans – over 9 million senior citizens 65 or older - from the American
Revolution to Operation Iraqi Freedom, and active duty personnel.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Groups Urged to Participate in Older
Americans Month
Administration
on Aging issues strategies, materials for local events
April 24, 2006 – With Older Americans Month set to
begin on May 1, the Administration on Aging is providing help to
organizations that want to sponsor events in their communities.
The theme, which has changed since January, is "Choices for
Independence," which highlights the need for mid-life and older persons to make thoughtful
choices that can help them remain healthy, productive, and financially
secure in their later lives, according to AoA.
Read more...
Earth Day Not So Happy as U.S. Wrestles with
Spiraling Energy Cost
Would have to be at least a baby boomer to remember first Earth Day
April 22, 2006 – As many senior citizens and
boomers will remember, it was in 1969 that a devastating oil spill off
the coast of Santa Barbara inspired visiting Wisconsin Senator Gaylord
Nelson to come up with the idea for Earth Day. Twenty million Americans
celebrated at the first event in 1970 and began actions to protect the
environment. Today, on the 36th anniversary, Americans again focus on
Mother Earth, with most of this attention shifting toward the developing
energy crisis. Read more..
Courts Fail to Offer Basic Information on Probate
By
ElderLawAnswers.com
April 12, 2006 - Probate -- the process of proving
that a will is valid and of settling an estate -- is among the most
common legal procedures in the United States. Yet the overwhelming
majority of state courts fail to offer consumers basic online
information and resources about probate, according to a survey conducted
by
HALT,
a nonpartisan legal reform organization.
Read more...
Most Senior Citizens Can't Afford Dental Insurance
April 7, 2006 - A survey of seniors' access to
dental care conducted by researchers at the University at Buffalo and
Buffalo State College presents a sobering picture of the dental needs
and barriers to dental care experienced by seniors.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Not Big Users of Cell Phones, Even
for Emergencies
New
Jitterbug phone designed for seniors with easy use, big numbers may make
difference
April 6, 2006 – A new cell phone has been
introduced that the distributors say is targeted for baby boomers and
their senior citizen parents. The Jitterbug, they say, features
"unprecedented simplicity." The announcement comes as new information
from the Pew Research Center shows seniors are not frequent cell phone
users, even for emergencies.
Read more...
Senior Citizens
Much More Critical on Moral Questions, Except Marital Affairs
But they don't like
marijuana, drinking, gambling are sex if not married
By Tucker Sutherland,
editor
March 29, 2006 – It would not be a good idea to come
around senior citizens smoking marijuana, drinking too much, having sex if
unmarried or gambling. Seniors are much more critical of these activities
than are younger people. On the other hand, if married people have an affair
or you have an abortion, seniors are more forgiving, according to results
from a new survey by the Pew Research Center.
Read more...
Uniform Laws Needed to Deal With Interstate 'Granny
Snatching'
San Antonio Express-News says states need
compatible laws following sensational case there
March 22, 2006 – "Granny Snatching" may not be a
term you have heard or read, unless you live in a community that has
experienced one of these high-profile cases where a widow, usually
wealthy, has become the subject of a furious legal battle over her
custody and the control of her money. Just such a case has been raging
in San Antonio and the San Antonio Express-News has editorialized for
uniform state laws to govern these cases.
Read more...
Senior Citizens Lack Tolerance of Young for
Mixed-Race Dating
Baby Boomer approval is right above the national average
at 77 percent
March
20, 2006 – Although 22 percent of all American adults say that they have
a close relative who is married to someone of a different race, and 76
percent of Americans see no problems with blacks and whites dating,
senior citizens are far behind the tolerance curve. Only half of those
who were adults during World War II agree interracial dating is okay.
Read
more...
Wear a White Ribbon in March to Raise Awareness of
Advance Care Planning
'It’s
About How You LIVE,' says National Hospice & Palliative Care
Organization
March 8, 2006 - To promote awareness of advance
care planning, the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization is
encouraging all Americans to wear a white ribbon in March to increase
awareness. Wearing the ribbon is particularly important on March 31, the
one-year anniversary of Terri Schiavo’s death, when many people will
take time to reflect on end-of-life discussions. (Read "What is
Advanced Care Planning" below news story)
Read more...
Senior Citizens Lead U.S. in News and Information
Consumption
Seniors lead all age groups
in regular use of TV
news, daily newspapers and radio news - over half going online
Feb. 25, 2006 – Most U.S. adults, lead by senior citizens
59 and older, prefer to get their
news from television. Three-quarters (77%) say the watch local
broadcast news, and 71 percent say they watch network or cable news
several times a week or daily. The numbers were much higher for seniors – 88 percent watch both local and national news.
What is most striking in the Harris Poll, however, is the massive news
and information consumption by seniors.
Read more...
Adult Children and Parents Talking More Often
New survey finds the
communications revolution drawing families closer
Feb.
23, 2006 – How often do senior citizens hear from their children? A
growing number of American adults either see or talk to a parent
(usually, it's mom) every day. More than four in ten (42%) make this
daily contact, while in 1989 a Gallup survey said only 32 percent did
so. The new report is from the Pew Research Center and looks at the
nature of family ties and frequency of family contact.
Read more...
New Survey on Stress Says Senior Citizens Barely
Bothered
Stressed out
Americans engage in unhealthy behaviors
By
Tucker Sutherland, editor
February 23, 2006 – Americans engage in
unhealthy behaviors such as comfort eating, poor diet choices, smoking
and inactivity to help deal with stress, according to a new national
survey released today. Most senior citizens don't have to worry,
however, since the research shows they are the least likely to feel
stressed. Read
more...
Are
Senior Citizens the Real "Peaceniks"?
Pew study says during
Vietnam and Iraq senior
citizens don't like wars
Feb. 22, 2006 – Remember all those graphic images
of the "Peaceniks," demonstrating to stop the Vietnam war? Those images
failed to capture America's major opponents to that war – senior
citizens. It is older Americans, not young people, who typically show
the greatest wariness about using military force. This was evident
during the war in Vietnam and remains the case