National Institute on Aging
National Institutes of Health
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Global Health and Aging
2 Global Health and AgingPhoto credits front cover, left to right (Dreamstime.com): Djembe; Sergey Galushko; Laurin Rinder; Indianeye;
Magomed Magomedagaev; and Antonella865.
3
Preface
Overview
Humanity’s Aging
Living Longer
New Disease Patterns
Longer Lives and Disability
New Data on Aging and Health
Assessing the Cost of Aging and Health Care
Health and Work
Changing Role of the Family
Suggested Resources
Contents
Rose Maria Li
1
2
4
6
9
12
16
18
20
22
25
4 Global Health and Aging
5
Preface
The world is facing a situation without precedent: We soon will have more older people than
children and more people at extreme old age than ever before. As both the proportion of older
people and the length of life increase throughout the world, key questions arise. Will population
aging be accompanied by a longer period of good health, a sustained sense of well-being, and
extended periods of social engagement and productivity, or will it be associated with more illness,
disability, and dependency? How will aging affect health care and social costs? Are these futures
inevitable, or can we act to establish a physical and social infrastructure that might foster better
health and wellbeing in older age? How will population aging play out differently for low-income
countries that will age faster than their counterparts have, but before they become industrialized
and wealthy?
This brief report attempts to address some of these questions. Above all, it emphasizes the central
role that health will play moving forward. A better understanding of the changing relationship
between health with age is crucial if we are to create a future that takes full advantage of the
powerful resource inherent in older populations. To do so, nations must develop appropriate
data systems and research capacity to monitor and understand these patterns and relationships,
��������
� �
������
� ���������������
��������������������� ���� �������
�����������������
���
��
well-being. And research needs to be better coordinated if we are to discover the most cost-effective
ways to maintain healthful life styles and everyday functioning in countries at different stages of
economic development and with varying resources. Global efforts are required to understand and
�
�������������
����������
������������� ������������������ �����������
������ �
��
�������� ���
��
existing knowledge about the prevention and treatment of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and
cancer.
Managing population aging also requires building needed infrastructure and institutions as soon as
possible. The longer we delay, the more costly and less effective the solutions are likely to be.
Population aging is a powerful and transforming demographic force. We are only just beginning
to comprehend its impact ...
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: POPULATION DYNAMICS. It contains: increase in the world's population, over and under population, anti and pro-natalist policies, China's one child policy, France population strategies, Bristol case study.
GEOGRAPHY IGCSE: POPULATION DYNAMICS. It contains: increase in the world's population, over and under population, anti and pro-natalist policies, China's one child policy, France population strategies, Bristol case study.
The Surgeon General’s Vision for a Healthy and Fit Nation.docxssusera34210
The Surgeon General’s Vision
for a Healthy and Fit Nation
2010
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
The Surgeon General’s Vision
for a Healthy and Fit Nation
2010
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health Service
Office of the Surgeon General
Rockville, MD
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health Service
Office of the Surgeon General
This publication is available on the World Wide Web at
http://www.surgeongeneral.gov
Suggested Citation
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The Surgeon General’s Vision for a Healthy and
Fit Nation. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Surgeon
General, January 2010.
INTRODUCTION ◊ 1
MESSAGE FROM THE SURGEON
GENERAL
Our nation stands at a crossroads. Today’s
epidemic of overweight and obesity threatens the
historic progress we have made in increasing
American’s quality and years of healthy life.
Two-third of adults1 and nearly one in three
children are overweight or obese.2 In addition,
many racial and ethnic groups and geographic
regions of the United States are
disproportionately affected.3 The sobering impact
of these numbers is reflected in the nation’s
concurrent epidemics of diabetes, heart disease,
and other chronic diseases. If we do not reverse
these trends, researchers warn that many of our
children—our most precious resource—will be
seriously afflicted in early adulthood with
medical conditions such as diabetes and heart
disease. This future is unacceptable. I ask you to
join me in combating this crisis.
Every one of us has an important role to play in
the prevention and control of obesity. Mothers,
fathers, teachers, business executives, child care
professionals, clinicians, politicians, and
government and community leaders—we must
all commit to changes that promote the health
and wellness of our families and communities.
As a nation, we must create neighborhood
communities that are focused on healthy nutrition
and regular physical activity, where the healthiest
choices are accessible for all citizens. Children
should be having fun and playing in
environments that provide parks, recreational
facilities, community centers, and walking and
bike paths. Healthy foods should be affordable
and accessible. Increased consumer knowledge
and awareness about healthy nutrition and
physical activity will foster a growing demand
for healthy food products and exercise options,
dramatically influencing marketing trends.
Hospitals, work sites, and communities should
make it easy for mothers to initiate and sustain
breastfeeding as this practice has been shown to
prevent childhood obesity. Working together, we
will create an environment that promotes and
facilitates healthy choices for all Americans. And
we will live longer and healthier lives.
In the 2001 Surgeon General’s Call to Action to
Prevent and Decrease Overwei ...
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Definitions:Obesity: Body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher.
Body mass index (BMI): A measure of an adult’s weight in relation to his or her height, specifically the adult’s weight in kilograms divided by the square of his or her height in meters.
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Methods:Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Self-reported weights and heights.Limited to three years of data and limited to three racial/ethnic populations; non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, and Hispanics.Age-adjusted to the 2000 U.S. standard population.
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
White non-Hispanic
Black non-Hispanic
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
White non-Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Black non-Hispanic
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
Table. Prevalence of obesity, by region and race/ethnicity, 2006-2008Non-Hispanic whiteNon-Hispanic blackHispanicTotal Both sexes23.735.728.7 Men25.431.627.8 Women21.839.229.4Northeast Both sexes22.631.726.6 Men25.026.526.9 Women20.036.126.0Midwest Both sexes25.436.329.6 Men27.032.129.7 Women23.840.129.2South Both sexes24.436.929.2 Men26.332.628.3 Women22.540.629.7West Both sexes21.033.129.0 Men22.134.127.3 Women19.832.030.4
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
SummaryNon-Hispanic blacks had the highest prevalence, followed by Hispanics, and non-Hispanic whites For non-Hispanic blacks
Overall prevalence of obesity—35.7%
Higher prevalences were found in the Midwest and South
Prevalence ranged from 23.0% (New Hampshire) to 45.1% (Maine)
40 states had a prevalence of ≥ 30%
5 states (Alabama, Maine, Mississippi, Ohio, and Oregon) had a prevalence of ≥ 40%
*
Compared to non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks had about 50% higher prevalence of obesity, and Hispanics had about 20% higher prevalence
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
Summary (Cont’d) For Hispanics
Overall prevalence of obesity—28.7%
Lower prevalence was observed in the Northeast
Prevalence ranged from 21.0% (Maryland) to 36.7% (Tennessee)
11 states had a prevalence of ≥ 30%For non-Hispanic whites
Ove.
1. Primary sources2. Secondary sources3. La Malinche4. Bacon’s.docxvannagoforth
1. Primary sources
2. Secondary sources
3. La Malinche
4. Bacon’s rebellion
5. Robert Carter III
6. Mesoamerica
7. Middle Passage
8. Indentured servitude
9. The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy
10. Triangular trade
11. Saint Dominique Revolt
12. Syncretism
13. Olaudah Equiano
14. Christopher Columbus
15. Columbian Moment
16. Hernan Cortes
17. Florentine Codex
18. Master Narrative of American History
19. Reconquista
20. The Paradox of Slavery
21. Indian Removal Act 1830
22. Trail of Tears
23. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
24. Niños Heroes (Heroic Children)
25. Antonio López de Santa Anna y Pérez de Lebrón
26. The Royal Africa Company
27. John Locke
28. St. Patrick’s Battalion
29. Chilam Balam
30. Popol Vuh
31. El requerimiento (The Requirement)
32. Manifest Destiny
33. Moses and Stephen F. Austin
34. Colonialism
35. Colonial Legacy
.
1. Prepare an outline, an introduction, and a summary.docxvannagoforth
1. Prepare
an outline
,
an introduction
, and
a summary
on the article selected. It s
hould be
a report of at least 4 page
double spaced.
2. Prepare a 4
PowerPoint slides
from the report.
NOTE
: See the attachment below to review the article.
.
1. Normative moral philosophy typically focuses on the determining t.docxvannagoforth
1. Normative moral philosophy typically focuses on the determining the right action for a person to perform in a given situation. First, how specifically is Aristotle’s virtue ethics focused slightly differently? Next, Aristotle thought that virtues are traits of character that manifest themselves through habitual activity and that are good for anyone to have. What are some of the virtuous traits to have according to Aristotle and how does acting in accordance with them over time bring about “correct” moral action? What does it mean to act in a morally correct way according to Aristotle?
Directions:
Please provide detailed and elaborate responses to the following questions. Your responses should include examples from the reading assignments. Each response should be at least one half of one page in length and utilize APA format.
1. According to virtue ethicists, how are virtues acquired?
2. What is situationist psychology?
3. List and briefly describe one of the criticisms of virtue ethics.
4. What is "The Golden Mean?"
5. Why is virtue ethics particularly well-suited to the medical profession?
PART I:
Directions:
The following problems ask you to evaluate hypothetical situations and/or concepts related to the reading in this module. While there are no "correct answers" for these problems, you must demonstrate a strong understanding of the concepts and lessons from this module's reading assignment. Please provide detailed and elaborate responses to the following problems. Your responses should include examples from the reading assignments and should utilize APA guidelines. Responses that fall short of the assigned minimum page length will not earn any points.
1.
Think of a profession you are considering as a career: engineering, or perhaps law or accounting or teaching. Could you develop a distinctive set of virtues for that profession? That is, are there some virtues that would be particularly important for members of that profession? Your response should be at least one page in length.
2. An important distinction for virtue theorists is between people who are happy and people who are flourishing. Do you know anyone (a public figure or an acquaintance) whom you would count as happy but not flourishing?
Your response should be at least one half of one page in length.
3. I have lived a dissolute life for many years: a life devoted to excessive eating, heavy drinking, laziness, deceitfulness, and pettiness. At age 45, I awaken one morning in the gutter, painfully sober after a three-day binge, and I resolve to change my ways and pursue virtue. In your opinion, how long would it make me to become a virtuous person? Could I become virtuous in an hour? A week? A month? Ever?
Your response should be at least one page in length.
4. Suppose Dan is dying from an unknown disease. He is wealthy and will give half of his money to anyone who can save his life. Joe, not know.
1. Paper should be 5-pages min. + 1 page works cited2. Should have.docxvannagoforth
1. Paper should be 5-pages min. + 1 page works cited
2. Should have at least 10 annotated sources (copy article onto word, highlight main point, write a few sentences about how it'll help you in writing the paper at the bottom of page)
3
. Should have an INTRO, NARRATION, ARGUMENTS, REFUTATION, CONCUSION
4. Use in-text citations and have organized mla format works cited page
SAMPLE OUTLINE
Research Paper Outline
Title: Rebellious Libya
Thesis: The United States should not get involved with Libya’s conflicts.
I.
Introduction:
A.
Start with the question, what is war? Explain briefly.
B.
Talk about the wars of the United States.
C.
What were the outcomes of some of those wars?
II.
Narration:
A.
Give some background on Libya.
B.
Explain how Col. Muammar Gaddafi became the leader of Libya
C.
Talk about why the citizens of Libya want to overthrow Gaddafi.
D.
Explain why the people feel that the United States should get involved in Libya’s conflicts.
III.
Partition:
A.
Thesis: I believe that the United States should not get involve with Libya’s conflicts.
B.
Essay Map.
1.
Cost of war.
2.
Using money in other Departments other defense.
3.
Killing innocent civilians and soldiers.
4.
Helping unknown rebels
5.
Involvement of foreign wars
IV.
Arguments:
A.
The cost of war is rising by the minute. The Obama Administration proposed a budget of $553 billion dollars for the department.
B.
Instead of spending all that money on war, we should be investing that money on health care and education.
C.
This conflict has caused the lives of many innocent civilians. NATO openly admitted to have killed innocent civilians, due to misguidance.
D.
The rebels fighting against Gaddafi are in need of military supplies. I don’t think that it is a good idea to help unknown rebels. We helped the Afghanistan rebels when they were fighting Russia. After they were victorious, they later became the “Taliban” and used those weapons to attack the US.
E.
Getting involved in foreign wars is not a good idea. The US has been involved in many foreign wars lately. These wars have been in foreign countries where Islam is the prominent religion. Libya is one of these countries. The involvement of the US in these places, builds a bad reputation worldwide and among the Muslim community.
V.
Refutation:
A.
Gaddafi’s actions against the civilians of Libya are totally wrong. Killing your own people is bad and therefore, we should help the rebels overthrow him.
B.
Gaddafi has been in power for many years. In fact, he holds the record for most years in power in a single country. This type of power can potentially lead to corruption and mistreatment of civilians.
C.
The people of Libya deserve to have democracy. They should have the right to elect their own leader.
D.
If Al Qaeda is threatening NATO and Libyan mercenaries then we should help them fight terrorism.
VI.
Conclusion:
A.
Summarize my arguments.
B.
State why we should not get involve with Libya’s conf.
1. Name and describe the three steps of the looking-glass self.2.docxvannagoforth
1. Name and describe the three steps of the 'looking-glass self'.
2. List and describe the three stages in George Mead's model of human development.
3. Piaget developed a four-stage process to explain how children develop reasoning skills. List each and give an example of one of the stages.
4. Briefly summarize the three elements of Freud's theory of personality and explain why sociologist have negative reactions to his analysis.
5. How does the mass media reinforce society's expectations of gender?
.
1. Provide an example of a business or specific person(s) that effec.docxvannagoforth
1. Provide an example of a business or specific person(s) that effectively use social media. What tools does the business or person use? How do they apply the tools effectively? Describe areas of improvement.
This assignment has to be 4 pages long, then it needs a cover page and reference page however that can not be a part of the four pages. So it would be 6 pages if you count the cover page and reference page!
.
More Related Content
Similar to National Institute on AgingNational Institutes of HealthU..docx
The Surgeon General’s Vision for a Healthy and Fit Nation.docxssusera34210
The Surgeon General’s Vision
for a Healthy and Fit Nation
2010
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
The Surgeon General’s Vision
for a Healthy and Fit Nation
2010
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health Service
Office of the Surgeon General
Rockville, MD
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Public Health Service
Office of the Surgeon General
This publication is available on the World Wide Web at
http://www.surgeongeneral.gov
Suggested Citation
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The Surgeon General’s Vision for a Healthy and
Fit Nation. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Surgeon
General, January 2010.
INTRODUCTION ◊ 1
MESSAGE FROM THE SURGEON
GENERAL
Our nation stands at a crossroads. Today’s
epidemic of overweight and obesity threatens the
historic progress we have made in increasing
American’s quality and years of healthy life.
Two-third of adults1 and nearly one in three
children are overweight or obese.2 In addition,
many racial and ethnic groups and geographic
regions of the United States are
disproportionately affected.3 The sobering impact
of these numbers is reflected in the nation’s
concurrent epidemics of diabetes, heart disease,
and other chronic diseases. If we do not reverse
these trends, researchers warn that many of our
children—our most precious resource—will be
seriously afflicted in early adulthood with
medical conditions such as diabetes and heart
disease. This future is unacceptable. I ask you to
join me in combating this crisis.
Every one of us has an important role to play in
the prevention and control of obesity. Mothers,
fathers, teachers, business executives, child care
professionals, clinicians, politicians, and
government and community leaders—we must
all commit to changes that promote the health
and wellness of our families and communities.
As a nation, we must create neighborhood
communities that are focused on healthy nutrition
and regular physical activity, where the healthiest
choices are accessible for all citizens. Children
should be having fun and playing in
environments that provide parks, recreational
facilities, community centers, and walking and
bike paths. Healthy foods should be affordable
and accessible. Increased consumer knowledge
and awareness about healthy nutrition and
physical activity will foster a growing demand
for healthy food products and exercise options,
dramatically influencing marketing trends.
Hospitals, work sites, and communities should
make it easy for mothers to initiate and sustain
breastfeeding as this practice has been shown to
prevent childhood obesity. Working together, we
will create an environment that promotes and
facilitates healthy choices for all Americans. And
we will live longer and healthier lives.
In the 2001 Surgeon General’s Call to Action to
Prevent and Decrease Overwei ...
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Definitions:Obesity: Body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher.
Body mass index (BMI): A measure of an adult’s weight in relation to his or her height, specifically the adult’s weight in kilograms divided by the square of his or her height in meters.
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Methods:Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Self-reported weights and heights.Limited to three years of data and limited to three racial/ethnic populations; non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, and Hispanics.Age-adjusted to the 2000 U.S. standard population.
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
White non-Hispanic
Black non-Hispanic
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
White non-Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Black non-Hispanic
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
(*BMI 30)
Hispanic
State-specific Prevalence of Obesity* Among U.S. Adults, by Race/Ethnicity, 2006-2008
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
Table. Prevalence of obesity, by region and race/ethnicity, 2006-2008Non-Hispanic whiteNon-Hispanic blackHispanicTotal Both sexes23.735.728.7 Men25.431.627.8 Women21.839.229.4Northeast Both sexes22.631.726.6 Men25.026.526.9 Women20.036.126.0Midwest Both sexes25.436.329.6 Men27.032.129.7 Women23.840.129.2South Both sexes24.436.929.2 Men26.332.628.3 Women22.540.629.7West Both sexes21.033.129.0 Men22.134.127.3 Women19.832.030.4
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
SummaryNon-Hispanic blacks had the highest prevalence, followed by Hispanics, and non-Hispanic whites For non-Hispanic blacks
Overall prevalence of obesity—35.7%
Higher prevalences were found in the Midwest and South
Prevalence ranged from 23.0% (New Hampshire) to 45.1% (Maine)
40 states had a prevalence of ≥ 30%
5 states (Alabama, Maine, Mississippi, Ohio, and Oregon) had a prevalence of ≥ 40%
*
Compared to non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks had about 50% higher prevalence of obesity, and Hispanics had about 20% higher prevalence
Source: CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
Summary (Cont’d) For Hispanics
Overall prevalence of obesity—28.7%
Lower prevalence was observed in the Northeast
Prevalence ranged from 21.0% (Maryland) to 36.7% (Tennessee)
11 states had a prevalence of ≥ 30%For non-Hispanic whites
Ove.
1. Primary sources2. Secondary sources3. La Malinche4. Bacon’s.docxvannagoforth
1. Primary sources
2. Secondary sources
3. La Malinche
4. Bacon’s rebellion
5. Robert Carter III
6. Mesoamerica
7. Middle Passage
8. Indentured servitude
9. The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy
10. Triangular trade
11. Saint Dominique Revolt
12. Syncretism
13. Olaudah Equiano
14. Christopher Columbus
15. Columbian Moment
16. Hernan Cortes
17. Florentine Codex
18. Master Narrative of American History
19. Reconquista
20. The Paradox of Slavery
21. Indian Removal Act 1830
22. Trail of Tears
23. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
24. Niños Heroes (Heroic Children)
25. Antonio López de Santa Anna y Pérez de Lebrón
26. The Royal Africa Company
27. John Locke
28. St. Patrick’s Battalion
29. Chilam Balam
30. Popol Vuh
31. El requerimiento (The Requirement)
32. Manifest Destiny
33. Moses and Stephen F. Austin
34. Colonialism
35. Colonial Legacy
.
1. Prepare an outline, an introduction, and a summary.docxvannagoforth
1. Prepare
an outline
,
an introduction
, and
a summary
on the article selected. It s
hould be
a report of at least 4 page
double spaced.
2. Prepare a 4
PowerPoint slides
from the report.
NOTE
: See the attachment below to review the article.
.
1. Normative moral philosophy typically focuses on the determining t.docxvannagoforth
1. Normative moral philosophy typically focuses on the determining the right action for a person to perform in a given situation. First, how specifically is Aristotle’s virtue ethics focused slightly differently? Next, Aristotle thought that virtues are traits of character that manifest themselves through habitual activity and that are good for anyone to have. What are some of the virtuous traits to have according to Aristotle and how does acting in accordance with them over time bring about “correct” moral action? What does it mean to act in a morally correct way according to Aristotle?
Directions:
Please provide detailed and elaborate responses to the following questions. Your responses should include examples from the reading assignments. Each response should be at least one half of one page in length and utilize APA format.
1. According to virtue ethicists, how are virtues acquired?
2. What is situationist psychology?
3. List and briefly describe one of the criticisms of virtue ethics.
4. What is "The Golden Mean?"
5. Why is virtue ethics particularly well-suited to the medical profession?
PART I:
Directions:
The following problems ask you to evaluate hypothetical situations and/or concepts related to the reading in this module. While there are no "correct answers" for these problems, you must demonstrate a strong understanding of the concepts and lessons from this module's reading assignment. Please provide detailed and elaborate responses to the following problems. Your responses should include examples from the reading assignments and should utilize APA guidelines. Responses that fall short of the assigned minimum page length will not earn any points.
1.
Think of a profession you are considering as a career: engineering, or perhaps law or accounting or teaching. Could you develop a distinctive set of virtues for that profession? That is, are there some virtues that would be particularly important for members of that profession? Your response should be at least one page in length.
2. An important distinction for virtue theorists is between people who are happy and people who are flourishing. Do you know anyone (a public figure or an acquaintance) whom you would count as happy but not flourishing?
Your response should be at least one half of one page in length.
3. I have lived a dissolute life for many years: a life devoted to excessive eating, heavy drinking, laziness, deceitfulness, and pettiness. At age 45, I awaken one morning in the gutter, painfully sober after a three-day binge, and I resolve to change my ways and pursue virtue. In your opinion, how long would it make me to become a virtuous person? Could I become virtuous in an hour? A week? A month? Ever?
Your response should be at least one page in length.
4. Suppose Dan is dying from an unknown disease. He is wealthy and will give half of his money to anyone who can save his life. Joe, not know.
1. Paper should be 5-pages min. + 1 page works cited2. Should have.docxvannagoforth
1. Paper should be 5-pages min. + 1 page works cited
2. Should have at least 10 annotated sources (copy article onto word, highlight main point, write a few sentences about how it'll help you in writing the paper at the bottom of page)
3
. Should have an INTRO, NARRATION, ARGUMENTS, REFUTATION, CONCUSION
4. Use in-text citations and have organized mla format works cited page
SAMPLE OUTLINE
Research Paper Outline
Title: Rebellious Libya
Thesis: The United States should not get involved with Libya’s conflicts.
I.
Introduction:
A.
Start with the question, what is war? Explain briefly.
B.
Talk about the wars of the United States.
C.
What were the outcomes of some of those wars?
II.
Narration:
A.
Give some background on Libya.
B.
Explain how Col. Muammar Gaddafi became the leader of Libya
C.
Talk about why the citizens of Libya want to overthrow Gaddafi.
D.
Explain why the people feel that the United States should get involved in Libya’s conflicts.
III.
Partition:
A.
Thesis: I believe that the United States should not get involve with Libya’s conflicts.
B.
Essay Map.
1.
Cost of war.
2.
Using money in other Departments other defense.
3.
Killing innocent civilians and soldiers.
4.
Helping unknown rebels
5.
Involvement of foreign wars
IV.
Arguments:
A.
The cost of war is rising by the minute. The Obama Administration proposed a budget of $553 billion dollars for the department.
B.
Instead of spending all that money on war, we should be investing that money on health care and education.
C.
This conflict has caused the lives of many innocent civilians. NATO openly admitted to have killed innocent civilians, due to misguidance.
D.
The rebels fighting against Gaddafi are in need of military supplies. I don’t think that it is a good idea to help unknown rebels. We helped the Afghanistan rebels when they were fighting Russia. After they were victorious, they later became the “Taliban” and used those weapons to attack the US.
E.
Getting involved in foreign wars is not a good idea. The US has been involved in many foreign wars lately. These wars have been in foreign countries where Islam is the prominent religion. Libya is one of these countries. The involvement of the US in these places, builds a bad reputation worldwide and among the Muslim community.
V.
Refutation:
A.
Gaddafi’s actions against the civilians of Libya are totally wrong. Killing your own people is bad and therefore, we should help the rebels overthrow him.
B.
Gaddafi has been in power for many years. In fact, he holds the record for most years in power in a single country. This type of power can potentially lead to corruption and mistreatment of civilians.
C.
The people of Libya deserve to have democracy. They should have the right to elect their own leader.
D.
If Al Qaeda is threatening NATO and Libyan mercenaries then we should help them fight terrorism.
VI.
Conclusion:
A.
Summarize my arguments.
B.
State why we should not get involve with Libya’s conf.
1. Name and describe the three steps of the looking-glass self.2.docxvannagoforth
1. Name and describe the three steps of the 'looking-glass self'.
2. List and describe the three stages in George Mead's model of human development.
3. Piaget developed a four-stage process to explain how children develop reasoning skills. List each and give an example of one of the stages.
4. Briefly summarize the three elements of Freud's theory of personality and explain why sociologist have negative reactions to his analysis.
5. How does the mass media reinforce society's expectations of gender?
.
1. Provide an example of a business or specific person(s) that effec.docxvannagoforth
1. Provide an example of a business or specific person(s) that effectively use social media. What tools does the business or person use? How do they apply the tools effectively? Describe areas of improvement.
This assignment has to be 4 pages long, then it needs a cover page and reference page however that can not be a part of the four pages. So it would be 6 pages if you count the cover page and reference page!
.
1. Mexico and Guatemala. Research the political and economic situati.docxvannagoforth
1. Mexico and Guatemala. Research the political and economic situation of these countries and write about their peculiar circumstances.
2. Honduras, El Salvador and Panama. Research the political and economic situation of these countries and write about their peculiar circumstances.
3. Costa Rica and Nicaragua. Research the ecological and political situation of these countries and write about their peculiar circumstances.
4. Colombia and Ecuador. Research about the truths and myths about this two countries and write about your impressions on these stereotypes.
.
1. Many scholars have set some standards to judge a system for taxat.docxvannagoforth
1. Many scholars have set some standards to judge a system for taxation for its validity. How can you decide if a tax is good or bad?
You can consider these five following principles for your Discussion. What do these issues mean? How do you think they matter?
Adequacy Equity Exportability Neutrality Simplicity
What other tax revenue systems could you consider? How do you think they would be better or worse?
2. What role do taxes play in political issues?
3. What is your opinion of a flat tax as some politicians have proposed?
.
1. List and (in 1-2 sentences) describe the 4 interlocking factors t.docxvannagoforth
1. List and (in 1-2 sentences) describe the 4 interlocking factors that led to the ourbreak of world war 1
2. Explain the difference between and authoritarian regime and a totalitarian regime.
3. List and (in 1-2 sentences) describe the 5 factors that led to the ourbreak of world war 2.
.
1. Please explain how the Constitution provides for a system of sepa.docxvannagoforth
1. Please explain how the Constitution provides for a system of separation of powers and checks and balances. Provide a fully developed essay of at least 500 words, and cite sources used.
2. Describe how a bill becomes a law at the national level, in a fully developed essay of at least 500 words. Support your work with cited sources, references to Lecture Notes, or URLs where you obtained your information.
.
1. Please watch the following The Diving Bell & The Butterfly, Amel.docxvannagoforth
1. Please watch the following: The Diving Bell & The Butterfly, Amelie, The Lookout, A Single Man, Her, Little Children, and An Education and
Please respond to the films. In particular, respond to how the film develops the identity of a single character for an audience, and which you responded to (either the characters themselves or the way the film constructed the character) the most, or the least please , 10 sentence min and no plagiariasm also it has to be
followowed exactly whats written here.
PS: please dont waste my time if you will do a messy assigment, just dont send me a msg.
.
1. Most sociologists interpret social life from one of the three maj.docxvannagoforth
1. Most sociologists interpret social life from one of the three major theoretical frameworks/perspectives (conflict theory, functionalism, symbolic interactionism). Describe the major points of each one. List at least one sociologist who has been identified with each of these three theories.
2. What is the difference between basic sociology and applied sociology?
3. List and describe the eight steps of the scientific research model.
4. Discuss the importance of ethics in social research. Define what is meant by ethics.
.
1. Members of one species cannot successfully interbreed and produc.docxvannagoforth
1. Members of one species cannot successfully interbreed and produce fertile offspring with members of other species. This idea is known as
a. reproductive success.
b. punctuated evolution.
c. adaptive radiation.
d. the biological species concept.
e. geographic isolation.
2. The origin of new species, the extinction of species, and the evolution of major new features of living things are all changes that result from
a. macroevolution.
b. fitness.
c. speciation.
d. the biological species concept.
e. convergent evolution.
3. Which is a barrier that can contribute to reproductive isolation?
a. timing
b. behavior
c. habitat
d. incompatible reproductive structures
e. all of the above
4. Which of the following statements is false?
a. Horses and donkeys are separate species.
b. Two mules can mate and produce fertile offspring.
c. A horse and a donkey can mate and produce offspring.
d. Two donkeys can mate and produce fertile offspring.
e. Two horses can mate and produce fertile offspring.
5. The evolution of the penguin’s wing from a wing suited for flying to a “flipper-wing” used for swimming is an example of
a. refinement of existing adaptations.
b. reproductive isolation.
c. adaptation of existing structures to new functions.
d. inheritance of acquired characteristics.
e. the biological species concept.
6. Which of the following have been preserved as fossils?
a. dinosaur footprints
b. insects preserved in amber
c. petrified plant remains
d. animal bones
e. all of the above
7. The mass extinctions that included the dinosaurs took place during which period?
a. Cambrian (543–510 million years ago)
b. Devonian (409–363 million years ago)
c. Carboniferous (363–290 million years ago)
d. Jurassic (206–144 million years ago)
e. Cretaceous (144–65 million years ago)
8. The development of the complex, camera-like eye of a mammal is an example of
a. refinement of existing adaptations.
b. reproductive isolation.
c. adaptation of existing structures to new functions.
d. inheritance of acquired characteristics.
e. the biological species concept.
9. Which of the following statements is true?
a. Carbon-14 dating is useful for studying the age of early dinosaur fossils.
b. Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,730 years.
c. Uranium-238 has a very short half-life.
d. Uranium-238 is present in all organisms.
e. Carbon-12 is not found in living plants.
10. Which of the following provides the best explanation for why Australia has so many organisms unique to that continent?
a. punctuated equilibrium
b. the biological species concept
c. convergent evolution
d. continental drift
e. cladistics
11. Scientists think that a meteor that fell in ____________________ may have led to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
a. Australia
b. the Yucatán peninsula
c. The Galápagos Islands
d. Pangaea
e. India
12. The great diversit.
1. Of the three chemical bonds discussed in class, which of them is .docxvannagoforth
1. Of the three chemical bonds discussed in class, which of them is simultaneously the weakest and most important for life on this planet as we know it?
2.Carbohydrates are very important sources of energy for life. Plants and arthropods also use carbohydrates as components of structures that are very important for their existence. Provide the names of the two most important carbohydrate based structures (one for plants and one for arthropods) and the carbohydrate components that are used to form them.
3._____________ _____________ are joined by ______________ bonds to form proteins.
4.Proteins can be used for several functions. Provide examples of structural and metabolic functions of proteins.
5.Describe the phosholipid bilayer of the plasma membrane. Why is this bilayer important for the formation of cells and the sequestration of chemical reactions within the cell?
.
1. Look at your diagrams for hydrogen, lithium, and sodium. What do .docxvannagoforth
1. Look at your diagrams for hydrogen, lithium, and sodium. What do they all have in common? What group are these elements in on the periodic table?
2. Look at your diagrams for fluorine and chlorine. What do they have in common?
Picture is in the link. Put answers on the word document and re-submit
.
1. Name the following molecules2. Sketch the following molecules.docxvannagoforth
1. Name the following molecules:
2. Sketch the following molecules:
3-cyclohexenone
4-ethyl 2,2,5-trimethyl 3-hexanone
ethyl butyrate
pentanoic acid
2-chloro 4-methyl 2,5-heptadienal
3,4-dichloro 4-ethyl octanal
p-chloro phenol
3-bromo 2-chloro 4-methyl hexane
3-cyclopropyl 1,2-cyclopentanediol
methyl phenyl ether
3,5-dimethyl 2-heptene-4,5-diol
3. Give two different uses for ethanol.
4. Name two categories of organic compounds (alkanes, aldehydes…) that have very strong characteristic odours.
.
1. List the horizontal and vertical levels of systems that exist in .docxvannagoforth
1. List the horizontal and vertical levels of systems that exist in organizations.
2.
Describe at least five steps involved in systems integration
3.
What is the role of ERP systems in system integration?
4. Why do you think functional silos are not appropriate for today's organization? Discuss your answer from organizational and technical perspectives.
5. Pick an organization that you know of or where you are/were working and provide examples of logical and physical integration issues that were faced by the organization when they broke the functional silos and moved to integrated systems.
.
1. Kemal Ataturk carried out policies that distanced the new Turkish.docxvannagoforth
1. Kemal Ataturk carried out policies that distanced the new Turkish republic of the 1920s from the Ottoman past. Why? What specific policies did Ataturk pursue? 2. Why many Arabs felt betrayed by the British (and the French) after the First World War? 3. Discuss at least three features of patrimonial leadership. List three or more Middle Eastern states where such type of political leadership persists 4. Describe the key processes (both internal and external) that initiated political and economic disintegration of the Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth century. 5. European military superiority in the late eighteenth century prompted Ottoman rulers to respond with what specific political measures? 6. The Zionist political movement originated in Europe rather than in the Middle East. Explain why and how. 7. After the Second World War, several Arab countries went through the process of transition from constitutional monarchies to republics. Identify three such countries and describe the course of events that brought about this transition. 8. How is religious Zionism different from secular Zionism? What is the relevance of this difference for the creation of the state of Israel? Has the relative influence of the two remained stable since the creation of the Israeli state? 9. What was the principle source of political legitimacy of the Ottoman Empire? 10. While most Ottoman European provinces, riding the tide of the nineteenth century nationalism, sought and won independence from Istanbul, Ottoman Arab provinces maintained their political loyalty to the Ottomans. What explains this difference between Arab and European provinces? 11. Social and political forces in favor of a constitutional reform in Iran (1905-1911) were markedly different from the groups that promoted constitutional limitations on executive powers of the sultan in the Ottoman Empire prior to the First World War? Explain this difference. 12. What are some of the key features of Arab socialisms? Which Arab leaders adopted socialist ideology? Which Arab leaders were opposed to it? 13. After the First World War, the new Middle Eastern protectorates (e.g., Syria, Lebanon, Iraq) were expected to develop into modern secular states. What specific policies did France and Britain try to implement? How successful have theses policies been? 14. The 1967 war was a watershed event for all major actors in the Middle East. Explain the consequences of the war for domestic politics in Israel and Egypt respectively.
.
1. If we consider a gallon of gas as having 100 units of energy, and.docxvannagoforth
1. If we consider a gallon of gas as having 100 units of energy, and 25 of those units are used to move the car, what law of thermodynamics accounts for the other 75 units of energy? (Points : 2)
the first law
the second law
2. Which of these is not a component of a molecule of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)? (Points : 3)
adenosine
phosphate
deoxyribose sugar
ribose sugar
3. Glycolysis is a sequence of ______ chemical reactions. (Points : 3)
nine
six
five
ten
4. Exergonic reactions produce products with a ___ energy level than that of the initial reactants. (Points : 3)
lower
higher
the same
5. When chemical X is reduced, which of these expressions would be an accurate representation of its reduced state? (Points : 3)
XO
XH
X
HX
6. Most enzymes are which kind of organic compound? (Points : 3)
carbohydrates
lipids
proteins
none of the above
7. The area on an enzyme where the substrate attaches is called the: (Points : 3)
active site
allosteric site
anabolic site
inactive site
8. Which of the following creatures would not be an autotroph? (Points : 3)
cactus
cyanobacteria
fish
palm tree
9. The process by which most of the world's autotrophs make their food is known as: (Points : 3)
glycolysis
photosynthesis
chemosynthesis
herbivory
10. Plants are the only organisms that use ATP for the transfer and storage of energy. (Points : 2)
True
False
11. The colors of light in the visible range (from longest wavelength to shortest) are: (Points : 3)
ROYGBIV
VIBGYOR
GRBIYV
ROYROGERS
12. Chlorophyll is a green pigment because it absorbs only the green part of the visible light spectrum. (Points : 2)
True
False
13. The photosynthetic pigment that is essential for the process to occur is: (Points : 3)
chlorophyll a
chlorophyll b
beta carotene
xanthocyanin
14. A photosystem is: (Points : 3)
a collection of hydrogen-pumping proteins
a series of electron-accepting proteins arranged in the thylakoid membrane
a collection of photosynthetic pigments arranged in a thylakoid membrane
found only in prokaryotic organisms
15. Which of these molecules is NOT a product of the Electron Transport System? (Points : 3)
ATP
Water
Pyruvate
NAD+
16. The dark reactions require all of these chemicals to proceed except: (Points : 3)
ATP
NADPH
carbon dioxide
oxygen
17. The structural unit of photosynthesis, where the photosystems are located, are called: (Points : 3)
chlorophylls
eukaryotes
stroma
thylakoids
18. Which of the following does NOT occur during the light independent process? (Points : 3)
CO2 is used to form carbohydrates
NADPH converts to NADP
ADP converts to ATP
ATP converts to ADP
19. The production of ATP that occurs in the presence of oxygen is called: (Points : 3)
aerobic respiration
anaerobic respiration
chemiosmosis
photosynthesis
20. The first stable chemical formed by the Calvin Cycle is: (Points :.
1. In 200-250 words, analyze the basic issues of human biology as th.docxvannagoforth
1. In 200-250 words, analyze the basic issues of human biology as they relate to chronic conditions and describe the interaction between disability, disease, and behavior. Examine and discuss the impact of biological health or illness on social, psychological, and physical problems from the micro, mezzo, and macro perspectives. Choose a chronic condition from those provided in your text and consider how you might feel, think, and behave differently if the condition were affecting you versus if the condition were affecting a stranger. How might you think differently about this chronic condition if it were affecting someone close to you, your neighbor, or someone in your community? Please include at least two supporting scholarly resources.
2.Our stage of life, intellectual/cognitive abilities, and sociocultural position in life, affect our perspectives and resultant behaviors about a number of conditions including cancer. Consider the information provided in the
“Introduction to the Miller Family”
document. Both Ella and Elías have been diagnosed with cancer. Ella has been fighting cancer with complementary and alternative methods with some success for many years. Elías, her grandson, is 10 years old and has recently been diagnosed with leukemia but has not yet begun treatment. Putting yourself in either Ella or Elías’s place, what might your perspective on your cancer be? Integrate how the stage of life, cognitive abilities, and sociocultural position of your chosen person impacts her/his perspective on his/her individual disease.
.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
National Institute on AgingNational Institutes of HealthU..docx
1. National Institute on Aging
National Institutes of Health
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Global Health and Aging
2 Global Health and AgingPhoto credits front cover, left to right
(Dreamstime.com): Djembe; Sergey Galushko; Laurin Rinder;
Indianeye;
Magomed Magomedagaev; and Antonella865.
3
Preface
Overview
Humanity’s Aging
Living Longer
New Disease Patterns
Longer Lives and Disability
New Data on Aging and Health
Assessing the Cost of Aging and Health Care
2. Health and Work
Changing Role of the Family
Suggested Resources
Contents
Rose Maria Li
1
2
4
6
9
12
16
18
20
22
25
3. 4 Global Health and Aging
5
Preface
The world is facing a situation without precedent: We soon will
have more older people than
children and more people at extreme old age than ever before.
As both the proportion of older
people and the length of life increase throughout the world, key
questions arise. Will population
aging be accompanied by a longer period of good health, a
sustained sense of well-being, and
extended periods of social engagement and productivity, or will
it be associated with more illness,
disability, and dependency? How will aging affect health care
and social costs? Are these futures
inevitable, or can we act to establish a physical and social
infrastructure that might foster better
health and wellbeing in older age? How will population aging
play out differently for low-income
countries that will age faster than their counterparts have, but
before they become industrialized
and wealthy?
This brief report attempts to address some of these questions.
Above all, it emphasizes the central
role that health will play moving forward. A better
understanding of the changing relationship
between health with age is crucial if we are to create a future
that takes full advantage of the
powerful resource inherent in older populations. To do so,
nations must develop appropriate
4. data systems and research capacity to monitor and understand
these patterns and relationships,
��������
� �
������
� ���������������
��������������������� �����������
�����������������
���
��
well-being. And research needs to be better coordinated if we
are to discover the most cost-effective
ways to maintain healthful life styles and everyday functioning
in countries at different stages of
economic development and with varying resources. Global
efforts are required to understand and
�
�������������
����������
������������� ������������������
�����������
������ �
��
�������� ���
��
existing knowledge about the prevention and treatment of heart
disease, stroke, diabetes, and
cancer.
Managing population aging also requires building needed
infrastructure and institutions as soon as
possible. The longer we delay, the more costly and less
effective the solutions are likely to be.
Population aging is a powerful and transforming demographic
force. We are only just beginning
5. to comprehend its impacts at the national and global levels. As
we prepare for a new demographic
reality, we hope this report raises awareness not only about the
critical link between global health
and aging, but also about the importance of rigorous and
coordinated research to close gaps in our
knowledge and the need for action based on evidence-based
policies.
Richard Suzman, PhD
Director, Division of Behavioral and Social Research
National Institute on Aging
National Institutes of Health
1
John Beard, MBBS, PhD
Director, Department of Ageing and Life Course
World Health Organization
Preface
2 Global Health and Aging
Figure 1.
Young Children and Older People as a Percentage of Global
Population: 1950-2050
Source: United Nations. World Population Prospects: The 2010
Revision.
Available at: http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp.
Overview
The world is on the brink of a demographic
6. milestone. Since the beginning of recorded
history, young children have outnumbered
������� �������
�����������
���������������������
the number of people aged 65 or older will
outnumber children under age 5. Driven by
falling fertility rates and remarkable increases in
life expectancy, population aging will continue,
even accelerate (Figure 1). The number of
people aged 65 or older is projected to grow
from an estimated 524 million in 2010 to nearly
1.5 billion in 2050, with most of the increase in
developing countries.
The remarkable improvements in life
expectancy over the past century were part
of a shift in the leading causes of disease
and death. At the dawn of the 20th century,
the major health threats were infectious and
parasitic diseases that most often claimed
the lives of infants and children. Currently,
noncommunicable diseases that more commonly
affect adults and older people impose the
greatest burden on global health.
�
�����
������� ���
�����
������������������ �
chronic noncommunicable diseases such as
�����������������
������
�������������!�����
7. changes in lifestyle and diet, as well as aging.
The potential economic and societal costs of
noncommunicable diseases of this type rise
sharply with age and have the ability to affect
economic growth. A World Health Organization
analysis in 23 low- and middle-income countries
estimated the economic losses from three
noncommunicable diseases (heart disease,
3
stroke, and diabetes) in these countries would
total US$83 billion between 2006 and 2015.
Reducing severe disability from disease
and health conditions is one key to holding
down health and social costs. The health
and economic burden of disability also can
be reinforced or alleviated by environmental
characteristics that can determine whether
an older person can remain independent
despite physical limitations. The longer people
can remain mobile and care for themselves,
the lower are the costs for long-term care to
families and society.
Because many adult and older-age health
problems were rooted in early life experiences
and living conditions, ensuring good child
��� �����
�
�� ����
���������� �������� ���
In the meantime, generations of children
8. and young adults who grew up in poverty
and ill health in developing countries will be
entering old age in coming decades, potentially
increasing the health burden of older
populations in those countries.
With continuing declines in death rates among
older people, the proportion aged 80 or older
is rising quickly, and more people are living
past 100. The limits to life expectancy and
lifespan are not as obvious as once thought.
And there is mounting evidence from cross-
national data that—with appropriate policies
and programs—people can remain healthy
and independent well into old age and can
continue to contribute to their communities
and families.
The potential for an active, healthy old age
is tempered by one of the most daunting and
potentially costly consequences of ever-longer
life expectancies: the increase in people with
����
������������
�� �������������������"����
dementia patients eventually need constant
care and help with the most basic activities
of daily living, creating a heavy economic and
social burden. Prevalence of dementia rises
sharply with age. An estimated 25-30 percent
of people aged 85 or older have dementia.
Unless new and more effective interventions
�������
�������������������
��� ����������
disease, prevalence is expected to rise
9. dramatically with the aging of the population
in the United States and worldwide.
Aging is taking place alongside other broad
social trends that will affect the lives of older
people. Economies are globalizing, people are
more likely to live in cities, and technology
is evolving rapidly. Demographic and family
changes mean there will be fewer older people
with families to care for them. People today
have fewer children, are less likely to be
married, and are less likely to live with older
generations. With declining support from
families, society will need better information
and tools to ensure the well-being of the
��� ���������
��
�������� �� ����������
��
D
un
da
ni
m
|
D
re
am
st
im
10. e.
co
m
Overview
4 Global Health and Aging
Humanity’s Aging
In 2010, an estimated 524 million people were
�����#%����� ���&'������
���� �������� ����
population. By 2050, this number is expected to
nearly triple to about 1.5 billion, representing
*#������
���� �������� �������� ����
��� �������
more developed countries have the oldest
���� ����
����� ���������������+����
��� �
older people—and the most rapidly aging
populations—are in less developed countries.
Between 2010 and 2050, the number of older
people in less developed countries is projected to
increase more than 250 percent, compared with
a 71 percent increase in developed countries.
This remarkable phenomenon is being driven
by declines in fertility and improvements in
longevity. With fewer children entering the
population and people living longer, older
people are making up an increasing share of the
11. total population. In more developed countries,
fertility fell below the replacement rate of two
live births per woman by the 1970s, down from
nearly three children per woman around 1950.
Even more crucial for population aging, fertility
fell with surprising speed in many less developed
countries from an average of six children in
1950 to an average of two or three children
in 2005. In 2006, fertility was at or below the
two-child replacement level in 44 less developed
countries.
Most developed nations have had decades to
adjust to their changing age structures. It took
��������
�*//�
��������������������� �;��
�����
population aged 65 or older to rise from 7
percent to 14 percent. In contrast, many less
developed countries are experiencing a rapid
increase in the number and percentage of older
people, often within a single generation (Figure
2). For example, the same demographic aging
that unfolded over more than a century in
France will occur in just two decades in Brazil.
Developing countries will need to adapt quickly
to this new reality. Many less developed nations
Figure 2.
The Speed of Population Aging
Time required or expected for percentage of population aged 65
and over to
rise from 7 percent to 14 percent
12. Source: Kinsella K, He W. An Aging World: 2008. Washington,
DC: National Institute on Aging
and U.S. Census Bureau, 2009.
5
�� �
����
����� ������������
����������
�
��� �
security of older people, and that provide the
health and social care they need, without the
same extended period of economic growth
experienced by aging societies in the West.
In other words, some countries may grow old
before they grow rich.
In some countries, the sheer number of
people entering older ages will challenge
national infrastructures, particularly health
systems. This numeric surge in older people is
���������
�� ����������
�������� �������������
populous countries: China and India (Figure 3).
<��
����� �������� ����
�=����������������#%�=�
will likely swell to 330 million by 2050 from 110
�� ��
�����
���
13. �����������
��� �������� ����
�
of 60 million is projected to exceed 227 million
in 2050, an increase of nearly 280 percent from
today. By the middle of this century, there
could be 100 million Chinese over the age of 80.
This is an amazing achievement considering
that there were fewer than 14 million people
this age on the entire planet just a century ago.
Figure 3.
Growth of the Population Aged 65 and Older in India and
China:
2010-2050
Source: United Nations. World Population Prospects: The 2010
Revision.
Available at: http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp.
C
ry
st
al
C
ra
ig
|
D
re
am
14. st
im
e.
co
m
Humanity’s Aging
6 Global Health and Aging
Living Longer
The dramatic increase in average life expectancy
during the 20th century ranks as one of
������
���������������������
����� ������������
babies born in 1900 did not live past age 50, life
expectancy at birth now exceeds 83 years in
Japan—the current leader—and is at least 81
years in several other countries. Less developed
regions of the world have experienced a steady
increase in life expectancy since World War
II, although not all regions have shared in
these improvements. (One notable exception
is the fall in life expectancy in many parts of
Africa because of deaths caused by the HIV/
AIDS epidemic.) The most dramatic and rapid
gains have occurred in East Asia, where life
expectancy at birth increased from less than 45
years in 1950 to more than 74 years today.
15. These improvements are part of a major
transition in human health spreading around
the globe at different rates and along different
pathways. This transition encompasses a
broad set of changes that include a decline
from high to low fertility; a steady increase
in life expectancy at birth and at older ages;
and a shift in the leading causes of death and
illness from infectious and parasitic diseases
to noncommunicable diseases and chronic
conditions. In early nonindustrial societies, the
risk of death was high at every age, and only a
small proportion of people reached old age. In
modern societies, most people live past middle
age, and deaths are highly concentrated at older
ages.
The victories against infectious and parasitic
diseases are a triumph for public health
projects of the 20th century, which immunized
millions of people against smallpox, polio,
and major childhood killers like measles. Even
earlier, better living standards, especially
more nutritious diets and cleaner drinking
water, began to reduce serious infections and
prevent deaths among children. More children
were surviving their vulnerable early years
and reaching adulthood. In fact, more than
60 percent of the improvement in female life
expectancy at birth in developed countries
between 1850 and 1900 occurred because more
children were living to age 15, not because more
��� ��������������
��� �������������
����
16. �� �
the 20th century that mortality rates began
to decline within the older ages. Research for
more recent periods shows a surprising and
continuing improvement in life expectancy
among those aged 80 or above.
The progressive increase in survival in these
oldest age groups was not anticipated by
demographers, and it raises questions about how
high the average life expectancy can realistically
rise and about the potential length of the human
lifespan. While some experts assume that life
expectancy must be approaching an upper limit, Be
rn
a
N
am
og
lu
|
D
re
am
st
im
e.
co
17. m
7
Figure 4.
Female Life Expectancy in Developed Countries: 1840-2009
Source: Highest reported life expectancy for the years 1840 to
2000 from online supplementary
material to Oeppen J, Vaupel JW. Broken limits to life
expectancy. Science 2002; 296:1029-
1031. All other data points from the Human Mortality Database
(http://www.mortality.org)
provided by Roland Rau (University of Rostock). Additional
discussion can be found in
Christensen K, Doblhammer G, Rau R, Vaupel JW. Aging
populations: The challenges ahead.
The Lancet 2009; 374/9696:1196-1208.
Living Longer
8 Global Health and Aging
data on life expectancies between 1840 and 2007
show a steady increase averaging about three
months of life per year. The country with the
highest average life expectancy has varied over
time (Figure 4). In 1840 it was Sweden and
today it is Japan—but the pattern is strikingly
similar. So far there is little evidence that life
expectancy has stopped rising even in Japan.
18. The rising life expectancy within the older
population itself is increasing the number and
proportion of people at very old ages. The
“oldest old” (people aged 85 or older) constitute
'������
���� �������� ����#%��
����������� ����
K�
12 percent in more developed countries and 6
percent in less developed countries. In many
countries, the oldest old are now the fastest
growing part of the total population. On a
Figure 5.
Percentage Change in the World’s Population by Age: 2010-
2050
Source: United Nations, World Population Prospects: The 2010
Revision.
Available at: http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp.
global level, the 85-and-over population is
projected to increase 351 percent between 2010
and 2050, compared to a 188 percent increase for
the population aged 65 or older and a 22 percent
increase for the population under age 65 (Figure 5).
The global number of centenarians is projected
to increase 10-fold between 2010 and 2050. In
the mid-1990s, some researchers estimated that,
over the course of human history, the odds of
living from birth to age 100 may have risen from
1 in 20,000,000 to 1 in 50 for females in low-
mortality nations such as Japan and Sweden.
Q������������ �
�����
19. ���
��
����������
��������
than current projections assume—previous
population projections often underestimated
decreases in mortality rates among the oldest
old.
9
The transition from high to low mortality
and fertility that accompanied socioeconomic
development has also meant a shift in
the leading causes of disease and death.
Demographers and epidemiologists describe this
shift as part of an “epidemiologic transition”
characterized by the waning of infectious and
acute diseases and the emerging importance of
chronic and degenerative diseases. High death
rates from infectious diseases are commonly
associated with the poverty, poor diets, and
limited infrastructure found in developing
countries. Although many developing countries
still experience high child mortality from
infectious and parasitic diseases, one of the
major epidemiologic trends of the current
century is the rise of chronic and degenerative
diseases in countries throughout the world—
regardless of income level.
Evidence from the multicountry Global Burden
of Disease project and other international
20. epidemiologic research shows that health
problems associated with wealthy and aged
populations affect a wide and expanding
swath of world population. Over the next
10 to 15 years, people in every world region
will suffer more death and disability from
such noncommunicable diseases as heart
disease, cancer, and diabetes than from
Figure 6.
The Increasing Burden of Chronic Noncommunicable Diseases:
2008 and 2030
Source: World Health Organization, Projections of Mortality
and Burden of Disease, 2004-2030.
Available at:
http://www.who.int/healthinfo/global_burden_disease/projection
s/en/index.html.
New Disease Patterns
New Disease Patterns
10 Global Health and Aging
�������
�����
��� �����������
����������
�
health problems in adulthood and old age stem
from infections and health conditions early in life.
Some researchers argue that important aspects of
21. adult health are determined before birth, and that
nourishment in utero and during infancy has a
direct bearing on the development of risk factors for
adult diseases—especially cardiovascular diseases.
Early malnutrition in Latin America is highly
correlated with self-reported diabetes, for example,
and childhood rheumatic fever is a frequent cause of
adult heart disease in developing countries.
Research also shows that delayed physical growth in
childhood reduces physical and cognitive functioning
�
� �����
������X�����
�<��
����� ������ ������������
rarely or never suffering from serious illnesses or
receiving adequate medical care during childhood
results in a much lower risk of suffering cognitive
impairments or physical limitations at ages 80 or
older.
Proving links between childhood health conditions
and adult development and health is a complicated
research challenge. Researchers rarely have the data
necessary to separate the health effects of changes
in living standards or environmental conditions
����
���������
��� ������������ �������������
�����
to his or her birth or childhood diseases. However,
a Swedish study with excellent historical data
concluded that reduced early exposure to infectious
diseases was related to increases in life expectancy.
A cross-national investigation of data from two
22. surveys of older populations in Latin America
and the Caribbean also found links between early
conditions and later disability. The older people in
the studies were born and grew up during times
of generally poor nutrition and higher risk of
exposure to infectious diseases. In the Puerto Rican
survey, the probability of being disabled was more
than 64 percent higher for people growing up in
Lasting Importance of Childinfectious and parasitic diseases.
The myth
that noncommunicable diseases affect mainly
��!��
���
����������� ����
����������� ����
�
the project, which combines information about
mortality and morbidity from every world region
������������������ ���� ��������
��������������
diseases. The burden is measured by estimating the
������ ���� ��
�
������� ����������������������������
based on detailed epidemiological information. In
2008, noncommunicable diseases accounted for an
estimated 86 percent of the burden of disease in
high-income countries, 65 percent in middle-income
countries, and a surprising 37 percent in low-income
countries.
By 2030, noncommunicable diseases are projected
to account for more than one-half of the disease
burden in low-income countries and more than
three-fourths in middle-income countries.
23. Infectious and parasitic diseases will account for
30 percent and 10 percent, respectively, in low- and
middle-income countries (Figure 6). Among the
60-and-over population, noncommunicable diseases
already account for more than 87 percent of the
burden in low-, middle-, and high-income countries.
But the continuing health threats from
communicable diseases for older people cannot
be dismissed, either. Older people account for a
growing share of the infectious disease burden in
low-income countries. Infectious disease programs,
including those for HIV/AIDS, often neglect
older people and ignore the potential effects of
population aging. Yet, antiretroviral therapy is
enabling more people with HIV/AIDS to survive
to older ages. And, there is growing evidence
that older people are particularly susceptible
to infectious diseases for a variety of reasons,
including immunosenescence (the progressive
deterioration of immune function with age)
and frailty. Older people already suffering from
one chronic or infectious disease are especially
vulnerable to additional infectious diseases. For
example, type 2 diabetes and tuberculosis are well-
known “comorbid risk factors” that have serious
health consequences for older people.
11
poor conditions than for people growing up in good
conditions. A survey of seven urban centers in Latin
America and the Caribbean found the probability
of disability was 43 percent higher for those from
24. disadvantaged backgrounds than for those from more
favorable ones (Figure 7).
If these links between early life and health at older
ages can be established more directly, they may have
�������
����
����
����� ������
������ �������� �����
countries. People now growing old in low- and middle-
income countries are likely to have experienced more
hood Health
Figure 7.
Probability of Being Disabled among Elderly in Seven Cities of
Latin
America and the Caribbean (2000) and Puerto Rico (2002-2003)
by Early Life
Conditions
Source: Monteverde M, Norohna K, Palloni A. 2009. Effect of
early conditions on disability among the
elderly in Latin-America and the Caribbean. Population Studies
2009;63/1: 21-35.
distress and disadvantage as children than their
counterparts in the developed world, and studies
such as those described above suggest that they are
at much greater risk of health problems in older age,
often from multiple noncommunicable diseases.
Behavior and exposure to health risks during a
�����
������ �� ����� ����
25. !��
������ ����
�� ���������
Exposure to toxic substances at work or at home,
arduous physical work, smoking, alcohol consumption,
diet, and physical activity may have long-term health
implications.
New Disease Patterns
12 Global Health and Aging
Are we living healthier as well as longer lives, or
are our additional years spent in poor health?
There is considerable debate about this question
among researchers, and the answers have broad
implications for the growing number of older
people around the world. One way to examine
the question is to look at changes in rates of
disability, one measure of health and function.
Some researchers think there will be a decrease
in the prevalence of disability as life expectancy
increases, termed a “compression of morbidity.”
Others see an “expansion of morbidity”—an
increase in the prevalence of disability as life
expectancy increases. Yet others argue that, as
advances in medicine slow the progression from
chronic disease to disability, severe disability
will lessen, but milder chronic diseases will
increase. In the United States, between 1982
and 2001 severe disability fell about 25 percent
among those aged 65 or older even as life
expectancy increased. This very positive trend
suggests that we can affect not only how long
26. we live, but also how well we can function with
advancing age. Unfortunately, this trend may
not continue in part because of rising obesity
among those now entering older ages.
We have less information about disability in
middle- and lower-income countries. With the
rapid growth of older populations throughout
the world—and the high costs of managing
people with disabilities—continuing and better
assessment of trends in disability in different
countries will help researchers discover more
about why there are such differences across
countries.
Some new international, longitudinal research
designed to compare health across countries
promises to provide new insights, moving
forward. A 2006 analysis sponsored by the U.S.
National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of
the U.S. National Institutes of Health, found
surprising health differences, for example,
between non-Hispanic whites aged 55 to 64
in the United States and England. In general,
people in higher socioeconomic levels have better
health, but the study found that older adults in
the United States were less healthy than their
British counterparts at all socioeconomic levels.
The health differences among these “young”
older people were much greater than the gaps
in life expectancy between the two countries.
Because the analysis was limited to non-
Z����
����������������������
��������
�����!����
27. the generally lower health status of blacks or
Latinos. The analysis also found that differences
in education and behavioral risk factors (such as
smoking, obesity, and alcohol use) explained few
of the health differences.
This analysis subsequently included comparable
NIA-funded surveys in 10 other European
countries and was expanded to adults aged 50 to
[��Q����
��
������������ ��K��������
���� ���
reported worse health than did European adults
as indicated by the presence of chronic diseases
and by measures of disability (Figure 8). At all
levels of wealth, Americans were less healthy
than their European counterparts. Analyses of
the same data sources also showed that cognitive
functioning declined further between ages 55 and
65 in countries where workers left the labor force
at early ages, suggesting that engagement in
work might help preserve cognitive functioning.
Subsequent analyses of these and other studies
should shed more light on these national
differences and similarities and should help guide
�� ������������������������� �������
�������
Longer Lives and Disability
13
Source: Adapted from Avendano M, Glymour MM, Banks J,
28. Mackenbach JP. Health disadvan-
tage in US adults aged 50 to 74 years: A comparison of the
health of rich and poor Americans
with that of Europeans. American Journal of Public Health
2009; 99/3:540-548, using data from
the Health and Retirement Study, the English Longitudinal
Study of Ageing, and the Survey of
Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe. Please see original
source for additional information.
Figure 8.
Prevalence of Chronic Disease and Disability among Men and
Women Aged 50-74 Years in the United States, England, and
Europe:
2004
Longer Lives and Disability
14 Global Health and Aging
The Burden of Dementia
The cause of most dementia is unknown, but the
�
� ���������� ������������������
����
���� ������ �
memory, reasoning, speech, and other cognitive
functions. The risk of dementia increases sharply
with age and, unless new strategies for prevention
and management are developed, this syndrome
is expected to place growing demands on health
�
�� �
��������������������������������
29. ����
population ages. Dementia prevalence estimates
vary considerably internationally, in part
because diagnoses and reporting systems are not
standardized. The disease is not easy to diagnose,
especially in its early stages. The memory
problems, misunderstandings, and behavior
common in the early and intermediate stages
are often attributed to normal effects of aging,
accepted as personality traits, or simply ignored.
Many cases remain undiagnosed even in the
intermediate, more serious stages. A cross-national
assessment conducted by the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
estimated that dementia affected about 10 million
people in OECD member countries around 2000,
just under 7 percent of people aged 65 or older.
�
������������������]�X^�����������
�������
����
form of dementia and accounted for between
�����������
��������������� �� �����
����������
cited in the OECD report. More recent analyses
have estimated the worldwide number of people
living with AD/dementia at between 27 million
and 36 million. The prevalence of AD and other
dementias is very low at younger ages, then nearly
���� ������������
�����
������� ���������������
65. In the OECD review, for example, dementia
affected fewer than 3 percent of those aged 65 to
30. 69, but almost 30 percent of those aged 85 to 89.
More than one-half of women aged 90 or older
had dementia in France and Germany, as did
about 40 percent in the United States, and just
under 30 percent in Spain.
The projected costs of caring for the growing
numbers of people with dementia are daunting.
Q���_/*/� �̀� ��� ��������{�������
�� ����������
Disease International estimates that the total
worldwide cost of dementia exceeded US$600
billion in 2010, including informal care provided
by family and others, social care provided by
community care professionals, and direct costs of
medical care. Family members often play a key
caregiving role, especially in the initial stages of
what is typically a slow decline. Ten years ago,
U.S. researchers estimated that the annual cost
of informal caregiving for dementia in the United
States was US$18 billion.
The complexity of the disease and the wide
������
��� � ���
������
����
�����
���������� ������
people and families dealing with dementia, and
���
����������������������������
��
���
�
31. ��� �
and social impact. The challenge is even greater
in the less developed world, where an estimated
two-thirds or more of dementia sufferers live
but where few coping resources are available.
|��+�����
���
�� ����������X��������
���
����
� �
suggest that 115 million people worldwide will
be living with AD/dementia in 2050, with a
markedly increasing proportion of this total in
less developed countries (Figure 9). Global efforts
�����
�����
�����
������
���
���
�����������
ways of preventing such age-related diseases as
� ����������
V
ie
st
ur
s
K
al
va
32. ns
|
D
re
am
st
im
e.
co
m
15
Source: Alzheimer’s Disease International, World Alzheimer
Report, 2010. Available at:
�����������
���
�������� �����
����
�
��
����������
�����������
Figure 9.
The Growth of Numbers of People with Dementia in High-
income
Countries and Low- and Middle-income Countries: 2010-2050
33. Longer Lives and Disability
16 Global Health and Aging
The transition from high to low mortality and
fertility—and the shift from communicable to
noncommunicable diseases—occurred fairly
recently in much of the world. Still, according
to the World Health Organization (WHO), most
countries have been slow to generate and use
evidence to develop an effective health response
to new disease patterns and aging populations.
In light of this, the organization mounted a
multicountry longitudinal study designed to
simultaneously generate data, raise awareness of
the health issues of older people, and inform public
policies.
The WHO Study on Global Ageing and Adult
Health (SAGE) involves nationally representative
cohorts of respondents aged 50 and over in six
countries (China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russia,
and South Africa), who will be followed as they age.
A cohort of respondents aged 18 to 49 also will be
followed over time in each country for comparison.
Q��������������� �}�~���������
�����
�]_//[�_/*/^�
has been completed, with future waves planned for
2012 and 2014.
In addition to myriad demographic and
socioeconomic characteristics, the study collects
34. data on risk factors, health exams, and biomarkers.
Biomarkers such as blood pressure and pulse rate,
height and weight, hip and waist circumference,
�
��� ����������������
������������������ ��� ��
and objective measures that improve the precision
of self-reported health in the survey. SAGE also
collects data on grip strength and lung capacity
New Data on Aging and Health
Figure 10.
Overall Health Status Score in Six Countries for Males and
Females:
Circa 2009
Notes: Health score ranges from 0 (worst health) to 100 (best
health) and is a composite measure
derived from 16 functioning questions using item response
theory. National data collections con-
ducted during the period 2007-2010.
Source: Tabulations provided by the World Health Organization
Multi-Country Studies Unit,
Geneva, based on data from the Study on global AGEing and
adult health (SAGE).
17
Figure 11.
Percentage of Adults with Three or More Major Risk Factors:
Circa 2009
Notes: Major risk factors include physical inactivity, current
35. tobacco use, heavy alcohol consump-
tion, a high-risk waist-hip ratio, hypertension, and obesity.
National data collections conducted
during the period 2007-2010.
Source: Tabulations provided by the World Health Organization
Multi-Country Studies Unit,
Geneva, based on data from the Study on global AGEing and
adult health (SAGE).
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
18-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80+
Age Group
and administers tests of cognition, vision, and
mobility to produce objective indicators of
�����
��
������� ����
����� ��
��������
�����������
activities of daily living. As additional waves
�� ������������ ����������
36. �������������
��
����
later years, the study will seek to monitor health
�
�����
���
���
�������������
�����
������
��
����
well-being.
A primary objective of SAGE is to obtain reliable
and valid data that allow for international
comparisons. Researchers derive a composite
measure from responses to 16 questions about
health and physical limitations. This health score
ranges from 0 (worst health) to 100 (best health)
and is shown for men and women in each of the six
SAGE countries in Figure 10. In each country, the
health status score declines with age, as expected.
And at each age in each country, the score for males
is higher than for females. Women live longer than
men on average, but have poorer health status.
The number of disabled people in most developing
countries seems certain to increase as the number
of older people continues to rise. Health systems
need better data to understand the health risks
faced by older people and to target appropriate
prevention and intervention services. The
SAGE data show that the percentage of people
with at least three of six health risk factors
37. (physical inactivity, current tobacco use, heavy
alcohol consumption, a high-risk waist-hip
ratio, hypertension, or obesity) rises with
age, but the patterns and the percentages
vary by country (Figure 11). �
���� �}�~����
important contributions will be to assess
��������������������������
���������������
��
and future disability. Smaller family size and
declining prevalence of co-residence by multiple
generations likely will introduce further
challenges for families in developing countries in
caring for older relatives.
New Data on Aging and Health
18 Global Health and Aging
|��� ����
����
����� ���
�����
!��
���������
��
of health care spending in both developed and
developing countries in the decades to come.
In developed countries, where acute care and
institutional long-term care services are widely
available, the use of medical care services by
adults rises with age, and per capita expenditures
on health care are relatively high among older age
38. groups. Accordingly, the rising proportion of older
people is placing upward pressure on overall health
care spending in the developed world, although
other factors such as income growth and advances
in the technological capabilities of medicine
generally play a much larger role.
Relatively little is known about aging and
health care costs in the developing world. Many
developing nations are just now establishing
baseline estimates of the prevalence and incidence
of various diseases and conditions. �
���� ��
��
���
from the WHO SAGE project, which provides data
on blood pressure among women in six developing
countries, show an upward trend by age in the
percentage of women with moderate or severe
hypertension (see Figure 12), although the patterns
�
����������������� ���� ��
�����
���
����
����
��
the countries. If rising hypertension rates in
those populations are not adequately addressed,
the resulting high rates of cerebrovascular and
Assessing the Costs of Aging
and Health Care
Figure 12.
Percentage of Women with Moderate or Severe Hypertension in
39. Six
Countries: Circa 2009
Note: National data collections conducted during the period
2007-2010.
Source: Tabulations provided by the World Health Organization
Multi-Country Studies Unit,
Geneva, based on data from the Study on global AGEing and
adult health (SAGE).
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
18-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80+
Age Group
19
cardiovascular disease are likely to require costly
medical treatments that might have been avoided
with antihypertensive therapies costing just a
few cents per day per patient. Early detection
and effective management of risk factors such as
hypertension—and other important conditions
such as diabetes, which can greatly complicate the
40. treatment of cardiovascular disease—in developing
countries can be inexpensive and effective ways of
controlling future health care costs. An important
future payoff for data collection projects such as
SAGE will be the ability to link changes in health
status with health expenditures and other relevant
variables for individuals and households. This will
provide crucial evidence for policymakers designing
health interventions.
A large proportion of health care costs associated
with advancing age are incurred in the year or so
before death. As more people survive to increasingly
older ages, the high cost of prolonging life is shifted
to ever-older ages. In many societies, the nature
and extent of medical treatment at very old ages
is a contentious issue. However, data from the
United States suggest that health care spending at
the end of life is not increasing any more rapidly
than health care spending in general. At the same
time, governments and international organizations
are stressing the need for cost-of-illness studies on
age-related diseases, in part to anticipate the likely
burden of increasingly prevalent and expensive
����
�����
�����
�&� �������������������
�
particular. Also needed are studies of comparative
performance or comparative effectiveness in
low-income countries of various treatments and
interventions.
The Costs of Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer
In high-income countries, heart disease, stroke,
41. and cancer have long been the leading contributors
to the overall disease burden. The burden from
these and other chronic and noncommunicable
diseases is increasing in middle- and low-income
countries as well (Figure 6).
To gauge the economic impact of shifting disease
���� ����
����� ���
�����
����������� �̀� ��Z�� ���
Organization (WHO) estimated the loss of
economic output associated with chronic disease in
23 low- and middle-income nations, which together
account for about 80 percent of the total chronic
disease mortality in the developing world.
The WHO analysis focused on a subset of leading
chronic diseases: heart disease, stroke, and
diabetes. In 2006, this subset of diseases incurred
estimated economic losses ranging from US$20
million to US$30 million in Vietnam and Ethiopia,
and up to nearly US$1 billion in China and India.
Short-term projections (to 2015) indicate that
losses will nearly double in most of the countries
if no preventive actions are taken. The potential
estimated loss in economic output for the 23
nations as a whole between 2006 and 2015 totaled
US$84 billion.
A recent analysis of global cancer trends by the
Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) estimated that
there were 13 million new cancer cases in 2009. The
cost associated with these new cases was at least
US$286 billion. These costs could escalate because
42. of the silent epidemic of cancer in less well-off,
resource-scarce regions as people live longer and
adopt Western diets and lifestyles. The EIU
analysis estimated that less developed countries
accounted for 61 percent of the new cases in 2009.
Largely because of global aging, the incidence
of cancer is expected to accelerate in coming
decades. The annual number of new cancer cases
is projected to rise to 17 million by 2020, and reach
27 million by 2030. A growing proportion of the
global total will be found in the less developed
��� ����
���
�_/_/��� ������� � ��� �������� ����
���
cases will occur in Asia.
Assessing the Costs of Aging and Health Care
20 Global Health and Aging
Health and Work
In the developed world, older people often
leave the formal workforce in their later years,
although they may continue to contribute to
society in many ways, including participating
in the informal workforce, volunteering, or
providing crucial help for their families. There
is no physiologic reason that many older people
cannot participate in the formal workforce, but
the expectation that people will cease working
when they reach a certain age has gained
credence over the past century. Rising incomes,
43. along with public and private pension systems,
have allowed people to retire based on their age
rather than any health-related problem.
It is ironic that the age at retirement from the
workforce has been dropping at the same time
that life expectancy has been increasing. Older
people today spend many years in retirement.
In OECD countries, in 2007, the average man
left the labor force before age 64 and could
expect 18 years of retirement (Figure 13). The
average woman stopped working at age 63
and looked forward to more than 22 years of
retirement if they adopt similar concepts of
retirement.
Many high-income countries now want people
to work for more years to slow escalating
costs of pensions and health care for retirees,
especially given smaller cohorts entering the
labor force. Most middle- and low-income
countries will face similar challenges.
Other than the economic incentives of
pensions, what would make people stay in the
workforce longer? To start, misconceptions
about older workers abound and perceptions
may need to change. In addition to having
acquired more knowledge and job skills
through experience than younger workers,
most older adults show intact learning and
thinking, although there are some declines in
cognitive function, most notably in the speed
of information processing. Moreover, there is
some evidence that staying in the labor force
after age 55 is associated with slower loss of
44. cognitive function, perhaps because of the
stimulation of the workplace and related social
engagement.
Even physical abilities may not deteriorate
as quickly as commonly assumed. Although
relatively little is known about the relationship
between age and productivity (which takes
wages into account), one study of German
assembly line workers in an automotive plant
���
����������������������������������
����� ��
of workers increased until age 65.
Whether older people spend more years in
the labor market also will depend on the
types of jobs available to them. Many jobs in
industrialized countries do not require physical
�������
��������������������� �������
�� ����
worker, but they may necessitate acquiring
new skills and retraining to adjust to changing
work environments. Evidence is needed on the
capacity of older workers, especially those with
�����������
� ��� �����������������������
�
���
Older people with limited mobility or other
��� ������� ������
��������������!���� ��
schedules or adapted work environments.
Considerations may need to be given to the
value of building new approaches at work or
45. institutions that will increase the ease with
which older people can contribute outside of
their families.Jos
ef
M
ue
lle
k
| D
re
am
st
im
e.
co
m
21
Figure 13.
Expected Years of Retirement for Men in Selected OECD
Countries: 2007
Note: OECD average is for 30 OECD member nations.
Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development. OECD Society at a Glance
2009. Available at:
46. http://public.tableausoftware.com/views/Retirement/LFEA.
Health and Work
22 Global Health and Aging
Familial support and caregiving among
generations typically run in both directions.
Older people often provide care for a variety
of others (spouses, older parents, children,
grandchildren, and nonfamily members), while
families, and especially adult children, are the
primary source of support and care for their
older relatives. Most older people today have
children, and many have grandchildren and
living siblings. However, in countries with very
low birth rates, future generations will have few
if any siblings. The global trend toward having
fewer children assures that there will be less
potential care and support for older people from
their families in the future.
As life expectancy increases in most nations, so
do the odds that several generations are alive at
the same time. In more developed countries, this
is manifested as a “beanpole family,” a vertical
extension of family structure characterized
by more but smaller generations. As mortality
rates continue to improve, more people in their
50s and 60s are likely to have surviving parents,
aunts, and uncles. Consequently, more children
will know their grandparents and even their
great-grandparents, especially their great-
grandmothers. There is no historical precedent
47. for a majority of middle-aged and older adults
having living parents.
However, while the number of surviving
generations in a family may have increased,
today these generations are more likely to live
separately. In many countries, the shape of
��������
��
�����!��������
��
������� �
������
economic security; rising rates of migration,
divorce, and remarriage; and blended and
stepfamily relations. In addition, more adults
are choosing not to marry or have children at
all. In parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the skipped-
generation family household—in which an
older person or couple resides with at least one
grandchild but no middle-generation family
members—has become increasingly common
because of high mortality from HIV/AIDS.
In Zambia, for example, 30 percent of older
women head such households. In developed
countries, couples and single mothers often
delay childbearing until their 30s and 40s,
households increasingly have both adults
working, and more children are being raised in
single-parent households.
The number, and often the percentage, of older
people living alone is rising in most countries.
In some European countries, more than 40
percent of women aged 65 or older live alone.
48. Even in societies with strong traditions of older
parents living with children, such as in Japan,
traditional living arrangements are becoming
less common (Figure 14).
In the past, living alone in older age often
was equated with social isolation or family
abandonment. However, research in many
cultural settings shows that older people prefer
to be in their own homes and communities,
even if that means living alone. This preference
is reinforced by greater longevity, expanded
����� ���
�������
���������������
��������� ����
friendly housing, and an emphasis in many
nations on community care.
The ultimate impact of these changing family
patterns on health is unknown. Older people
���� ����� �
������ ���� ���
������
���������
sharing goods that might be available in a larger
family, and the risk of falling into poverty in
older age may increase as family size falls. On
the other hand, older people are also a resource
for younger generations, and their absence may
create an additional burden for younger family
members.
Changing Role of the Family
49. 23
Long-Term Care
Many of the oldest-old lose their ability to live
independently because of limited mobility,
frailty, or other declines in physical or cognitive
functioning. Many require some form of long-
term care, which can include home nursing,
community care and assisted living, residential
�������
�� �
�����
�������� ���Q������
����
��
costs associated with providing this support
may need to be borne by families and society.
In less developed countries that do not have
an established and affordable long-term care
infrastructure, this cost may take the form
of other family members withdrawing from
employment or school to care for older relatives.
And, as more developing country residents seek
jobs in cities or other areas, their older relatives
back home will have less access to informal
family care.
The future need for long-term care services
(both formal and informal) will largely be
determined by changes in the absolute number
of people in the oldest age groups coupled with
trends in disability rates. Given the increases in
life expectancy and the sheer numeric growth
of older populations, demographic momentum
50. will likely raise the demand for care. This
growth could, however, be alleviated by declines
in disability among older people. Further, the
narrowing gap between female and male life
expectancy reduces widowhood and could mean
a higher potential supply of informal care by
older spouses. The great opportunity for public
��� �������������
������������ � ��� �����_*���
century is to keep older people healthy longer,
delaying or avoiding disability and dependence.
Figure 14.
Living Arrangements of People Aged 65 and Over in Japan:
1960 to 2005
�
����!����"� #���
�$�"#���������
�%��"&��"�
������
�"��'����
����
�
��
�$�"#��"��"���������
arrangements.
Sources: Japan National Institute of Population and Social
Security Research. Population
Statistics of Japan 2008.
Available at: http://www.ipss.go.jp/p-info/e/psj2008/PSJ2008-
07.xls.
Changing Role of the Family
51. 24 Global Health and Aging
Q����
��
������� �����������������������
booklet underscore the value of cross-national
data for research and policy. International
and multi-country data help governments and
policymakers better understand the broader
implications and consequences of aging,
learn from the experiences in other countries,
including those with different health care
systems and at a different point along the aging
and development continuum, and facilitate the
crafting of appropriate policies, especially in the
developing world.
Valuable new information is coming from
nationally representative surveys, often panel
studies that follow the same group of people
as they age. The U.S. Health and Retirement
Study (HRS), begun in 1990, has painted a
����� ������������� �� �������
������� ����������
retirement, income and wealth, and family
characteristics and intergenerational transfers.
In recent years, other nations have used the
Z{}�=������
�� ������
��� ���������
�_/�///�
�������
�����������%/�=���������� ������ �
52. �
��
similar large-scale, longitudinal studies
of their own populations. Several parallel
studies have been established throughout the
world, including in China, England, India,
Ireland, Japan, Korea, and Mexico, with more
planned in other countries such as Thailand
and Brazil. In addition, coordinated multi-
country panel studies are effectively building
an infrastructure of comprehensive and
comparable data on households and individuals
to understand individual and societal aging.
The Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement
�
��������]}Z�{�^�=��
�� ��
��*%����
������
as of 2010 (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic,
Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland,
Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain,
}����
��}������ �
�^�=��
������ �̀���Z�� ���
Organization (WHO) Study on global AGEing
and adult health (SAGE) in six countries
(China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russian
Federation, and South Africa) greatly expand
the number of countries by which informative
comparisons can be made of the impact of
policies and interventions on trends in aging,
health, and retirement. A key aspect of this
53. new international community of researchers is
that data are shared very soon after collected
with all researchers in all countries.
Many other cross-national aging-related
datasets and initiatives offer comparable
demographic indicators that reveal historical
trends and offer projections to help
international organizations and governments,
planners, and businesses make informed
decisions. These sources include, for example,
the International Database on Aging, involving
227 countries; the International Network for
the Demographic Evaluation of Populations
and Their Health (INDEPTH), involving 19
developing nations; the Human Mortality
Database, involving 28 countries; and the
2006 Global Burden of Disease and Risk
Factors initiative, which is strengthening
the methodological and empirical basis for
undertaking comparative assessments of
health problems and their determinants and
consequences in aging population worldwide.
A Note About the Data Behind This Report
25
Suggested Resources
Readings
Abegunde DO, Mathers CD, Adam T, Ortegon M, Strong K. The
burden and costs of chronic
diseases in low-income and middle-income countries. The
Lancet 2007 (December 8); 370:1929-1938.
54. Avendano M, Glymour MM, Banks J, Mackenbach JP. Health
disadvantage in US adults aged 50 to
74 years: A comparison of the health of rich and poor
Americans with that of Europeans. American
Journal of Public Health 2009: 99/3:540-548.
��
������"������"��� ���
�����}������|��X��������
���������
������
������
�����}�������
���
�
England. JAMA 2006 (May 3); 295/17:2037-2045.
Chatterji S, Kowal P, Mathers C, Naidoo N, Verdes E, Smith JP,
Suzman R. The health of aging
populations in China and India. Health Affairs 2008; 27/4:1052-
1063.
Christensen K, Doblhammer G, Rau R, Vaupel JW. Ageing
populations: The challenges ahead.
The Lancet 2009; 374/9696:1196-1208.
Crimmins EM, Preston SH, Cohen B., eds. International
Differences in Mortality at Older Ages.
Dimensions and Sources. Washington, DC: The National
Academies Press, 2010.
European Commission. 2009 Ageing Report: Economic and
Budgetary Projections for the
EU-27 Member States (2008-2060). Brussels: European
Communities, 2009.
55. Available at:
http://www.da.dk/bilag/publication14992_ageing_report.pdf.
Kinsella K, He W. An Aging World: 2008. Washington, DC:
National Institute on Aging and U.S.
Census Bureau, 2009.
Lafortune G, Balestat G. Trends in Severe Disability Among
Elderly People. Assessing the Evidence
in 12 OECD Countries and the Future Implications. OECD
Health Working Papers 26. Paris:
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development,
2007.
Lopez AD, Mathers CD, Ezzati M, Jamison DT, Murray CJL,
eds. Global Burden of Disease and Risk
Factors. Washington, DC: The World Bank Group, 2006.
National Institute on Aging. Growing Older in America: The
Health and Retirement Study.
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, 2007.
Oxley, H. Policies for Healthy Ageing: An. Overview. OECD
Health Working Papers 42. Paris:
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development,
2009.
Plassman BL, Langa KM, Fisher GG, Heeringa SG, Weir DR,
Ofstedal MB, Burke JR, Hurd MD,
Potter GG, Rodgers WL, Steffens DC, Willis RJ, and Wallace
RB. Prevalence of dementia in the
United States: The aging, demographics, and memory study.
Neuroepidemiology 2007; 29:125-132.
Rohwedder S, Willis RJ. Mental retirement. Journal of
56. Economic Perspectives 2010 Winter; 24/1:
119-138.
Zeng Y, G Danan, Land KC. The association of childhood
socioeconomic conditions with healthy
longevity at the oldest old ages in China. Demography, 2007;
44/3:497-518.
Suggested Resources
26 Global Health and Aging
Web Resources
English Longitudinal Study of Ageing
http://www.ifs.org.uk/elsa/
European Statistical System (EUROSTAT)
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu
Health and Retirement Study
http://hrsonline.isr.umich.edu/
Human Mortality Database
http://www.mortality.org/
International Network on Health Expectancy and the Disability
Process
http://reves.site.ined.fr/en
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Health Data 2010: Statistics and Indicators
http://www.oecd.org/health/healthdata (may require a fee)
Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe
57. http://www.share-project.org/
United Nations. World Population Prospects: The 2010
Revision.
http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp
U.S. Census Bureau International Data Base
http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/
U.S. National Institute on Aging
http://www.nia.nih.gov/
�̀� ��� ����������{�����
http://www.alz.co.uk/research/worldreport/
World Health Organization. Projections of Mortality and
Burden of Disease, 2004-2030.
http://www.who.int/healthinfo/global_burden_disease/projection
s/en/index.html.
World Health Organization Study on global AGEing and adult
health (SAGE)
http://www.who.int/healthinfo/systems/sage/en/
27
Funding for the development of this publication was provided
by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), National
Institutes of Health (NIH) (HHSN263200700991P).
Participation by the NIA in support of this publication does not
"�������
*���+����$�����
���
58. ������
�������<�=��<>=�
��?�@��Q�� ����"��
��>�
��� "��>�� "�@��$�����
The designations employed and the presentation of the material
in this publication do not imply the expression of any
opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health
Organization concerning the legal status of any country,
territory, city
�� �� �
��
������ ���
������=�
���
"���"�"#�������
���� ��
"�
��������
"������
��'
�"�������Q
�����
�"���
"������������"��
approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full
agreement.
X�����"��
"�
�����������
�� "����
��
������ �"�� "���������Y���
59. �������
���"
�����
*��� �����*� ����"�
�����
��
recommended by the World Health Organization in preference
to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned.
Errors and omissions excepted, the names of proprietary
products are distinguished by initial capital letters.
All reasonable precautions have been taken by the World Health
Organization to verify the information contained in
this publication. However, the published material is being
distributed without warranty of any kind, either expressed or
implied. The responsibility for the interpretation and use of the
material lies with the reader. In no event shall the World
Health Organization be liable for damages arising from its use.
National Institute on Aging
National Institutes of Health
NIH Publication no. 11-7737
October 2011
Discussion: Leadership Map
The Reeves reading contains several useful resources for
school leaders as appendices. Create your own leadership map
using Appendix B (see also Chapter 8). After you’re done, write
a discussion post that responds to the questions below:
· Which quadrant of the Leadership for Learning Framework
contains most of your plotted points?
60. · What are the specific points that are in this most populated
quadrant?
· What adjustments can you make to get more of your plotted
points into the leading quadrant?
Instructions: Life Review Paper
(250 points Total: Proposal/ Script 30 points + Final Paper 220
points)
A Life review is a naturally occurring, universal process
consisting of reminiscence, thinking about
oneself, and a reconsideration of previous life experiences and
their meaning. You will be doing a Life
Review on an older adult (65 years or older), by interviewing
them. This Life Review assignment can
be done with a family member, a loved one, a friend etc. DO
NOT ASK SOMEONE YOU DO NOT
TRUST, I DO NOT WANT YOU UNCOMFORTABLE OR IN A
COMPRIMISING SITUATION.
Ultimately, I would love for you to interview someone you have
a connection with and someone you
would like to know more about (as long as they are 62+). If
finding an older adult is an issue for you,
please email me by 12/31/19 ([email protected]) so we may
figure something out for you. If
you do not let me know by 12/31/19, I will assume you have
someone you can interview and are moving
along with the assignment.
The “Life Review Paper” will have two submissions:
1. Proposal / Script (Due by 11pm, on 1/3/20)
61. 2. Final Life Review Paper (Due by 11pm, on 1/17/20)
Format and Submission:
Submissions will be made via Dropbox on BeachBoard. The
Final Life Review Paper should
be 6-9 pages long (do not exceed 9 pages) and are due on the
dates stated above. These submissions
must be typed in Times New Roman, size 12 font, double
spaced, and in APA (6th ed.) format with in-text
citations and include a Title Page, Abstract, and Reference Page
(Title, Abstract and Reference pages are
not included in total page count). I will accept late papers;
however, you will be penalized 7 points for
each day it is late (unless you have an excused absence and
provide documentation of the situation (such
as doctors note, family issue, jury duty etc.), in which case,
keep me in the loop.
Grading:
Use the assignment guidelines below to compose an A+ paper,
if you include the necessary
components of this paper in APA format, you will do just fine �
The Point Scale is as follows:
Proposal / Script (2-3 pages): 30 points
Final Life Review Paper (6-9 pages): 220 overall points
distributed as following:
Interview: 100 points
Application of Theory: 60 points
62. Reflection: 40 points
Paper organization, grammar, spelling, APA, etc.: 20 points
Background Information for our Life Review Paper – Why this
paper is important for our class?
Life review, as described by Robert Butler, is a naturally
occurring, universal mental process
prompted by the realization of a foreshortened life expectancy.
It potentially proceeds toward a
reorganization of the self, including the achievement of such
characteristics as wisdom and serenity in the
aged. The process consists of reminiscence, thinking about
oneself, and a reconsideration of previous life
experiences and their meaning. The task of a life review is to
evaluate one’s life and accomplishments
and to accept the whole, both the good and the difficulties, as
all necessarily a part of one’s own
individual life. This sense of embracing life confirms that one’s
story has been “a meaningful adventure
in history.”
The life review process takes place gradually over a period of
years for the older person and an
interested other person usually assist the older adult by taking
an oral history. The history can be taken
over a period of several sessions and may be tape recorded
(when consented to). The results are life long-
lasting memories, which may be given to the older adult or their
family members and kept as a keepsake
and shared with younger family members.
63. Reference: "Life Review." Encyclopedia of Aging. Retrieved
March 15, 2018 from
Encyclopedia.com:
http://www.encyclopedia.com/education/encyclopedias-
almanacs-transcripts-
and-maps/life-review
Instructions on how to conceptualize / write your Life Review
Paper:
Proposal/ Script (30 points, Due 1/3/20, by 11pm):
Prior to writing your Final Life Review Paper, you will need to
complete and submit (via
Dropbox) the “Proposal / Script”. This submission will be
graded, and feedback will be provided shortly
after submission. Only after this submission is graded and you
receive feedback, should you start working
on your interview/ paper.
Proposal (1 page): First you are required to submit a proposal of
how you will complete this
assignment. Compose 1 page on what you know about this
person and what you hope to know or
understand about this person. In addition, the Proposal should
answer the following questions:
any other
demographic information you would like to include).
ill this interview take place? (Describe the setting,
date and time if you
have that information)
64. ncerns and what are you looking forward to
in completing this
assignment?
experiencing and why?
(acquaint yourself with the theories prior to the actual interview
so you are
prepared to assimilate the theory with the older adult. The
theories are listed
below.)
The Script: After your proposal, you will need to come up with
a series of questions (script) that
you will want to ask the older adult you are interviewing. These
questions should cover the history of the
person’s life and capture the essence of who they are. These
questions should also help you assess the
older adult using a theory model (possible theories below).
While developing the questions, please have
in mind the theoretical approach you will use to assess the older
adult.
There is not a specific number of questions you should come up
with, however, a good set of
questions for a paper of this caliber will round to an average
about 15 questions. The questions should be
derived from our course concepts such as chronic disease,
biology of aging, love and intimacy, social
interactions, living arrangements, economic security, productive
aging, retirement, death and dying, etc.
65. Please stay respectful of any topic your interviewee does not
want to discuss. In writing this paper,
think of yourself as a qualitative researcher. Meaning, in this
process you have the chance to
design your research study, conduct your own case study, and
later discuss its results. Your
Proposal / Script is the first step to designing your case research
study!
http://www.encyclopedia.com/education/encyclopedias-
almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/life-review
http://www.encyclopedia.com/education/encyclopedias-
almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/life-review
Final Life Review Paper (220 points, Due 1/17/20, by 11pm):
This is the final submission of this paper and must include The
Interview (including the setting
portion of your proposal), Theory Application, and Reflection.
The Interview (4-6 pages): Please include the highlights from
the “setting” portion of your
Proposal with this portion of the paper, as you are telling the
story of the life of an older adult, you want
to give the reader a good amount of detail of their background.
This section is written in paragraph format
in descriptive writing form (example is provided on page below,
along with recommendations for the
interview).
Application of Theory (1-2 pages): This portion allows you to
coin learned course material to
your interview. In this section, incorporate what you learned in
class, into this interview. Please state and
define the theoretical approach(s) you are using to analyze the
66. interviewee. It is a good idea to describe
the older adult’s wellness and capabilities at the time of
interview. Show your understanding of course
concepts’ in your application to the interviewee. Three citations
necessary (any material presented in
this course can be used), don’t forget: whenever you cite a
source you need to give the appropriate
APA reference.
Reflection (1 page): Reflect on what you learned from this
assignment. Address elements not
only learned from the older adult, but also the interview
processes and application of course concepts.
Moreover, state what you learned from this writing process.
Describe what you would have done different
through this process and explain why. Also, briefly describe
your own personal reactions associated with
one’s own aging process.
Possible Theories of Aging to use for your paper, please refer to
your text and outside sources for more
theories and or detailed information on these theories (pick at
least 1):
-Clock Theory
eory
-and-Tear Theory
-we-have-lost Syndrome
67. Recommendations on how to conduct your interview
Begin by briefly expressing your interest in learning about the
life of the older adult’s life and set
an appointment for a convenient time and place where the
interview will take place. Explain that you will
use this interview as a class assignment and ask for permission
from the older adult at this time to share
the interview with your professor/class (you do not need to
mention real names in your paper if you do
not want to). Interview your subject in a quiet location. With
permission, you can use a recorder device to
register the interview process and your subject’s answers. By
recording the interview rather than taking
notes, it will give you the chance to focus on other types of
communication, such as body language, facial
expression, etc. which will help with your descriptive skills
while writing your paper. Make sure the older
adult is comfortable and is seated in a position to be heard (you
could also maintain eye contact if in the
elder’s cultural background eye contact is a form of being
polite.) Allow adequate time for the interview
but do not prolong more than two sessions.
After conducting the interview, you will then write up the
questions and answers to the interview
in paragraph format. When writing up the interview be as
descriptive as possible. You must use critical
thinking skills to make the experience flow and you want to
allow the reader to feel as if they experienced
the interview for themselves. Thus, do not just simply state I
asked her if she was married and she replied
her husband died 7 years ago. Instead describe the reactions and
68. report in descriptive detail.
>Example of Descriptive Detail Writing:
As we sat near the window a cool breeze came in the room, she
grabbed her blanket around her
shoulder and pulled it tightly to warm herself. I asked Mrs.
Hudson if she had ever been married, adding
a smile to soften the question. She replied: “I was married for
42 years to the love of my life, Charles”.
She paused, it seemed for an eternity, and then continued, “…
he passed away 7 years ago, and I think of
him each day. Be sure to use descriptive words and transitions
to make this portion of the paper flow.
A final note:
This is not only a writing assignment. It is also designed to give
you experience with
interviewing, work and learn from an older adult and expand on
your writing skills. Give it your best
effort, and you will learn something valuable by listening to a
real-life story. The Life Review Interview
should present a full picture of your subject’s life. Details help.
To accomplish this, you will need to be an
engaged listener, involving yourself in the person’s story, and
not just completing a class assignment.
You may need to interview the person twice, going back for
more detailed answers in areas that interest
you. At times, you may need to rephrase some of the questions
to make them better understood.
You may need to prompt the older adult, using such phrases as
“tell me more,” “I think I understand, you
69. were…” etc. Do not force the person to go into detail on a
particular topic if he/she is really
uncomfortable! Allow the interviewee to talk about what
interests him/her but, move him/her along so
you can have a story that covers the whole life. You can get the
interview moving along by saying things
like, “I would like to hear more on that later if we have time.
Now, I’d like to ask you about…”
I am here to help, so please do not hesitate to reach out to me if
you have any questions.
Final Life Review Paper (6-8 pages): 220 overall points:
s, 4-6 pages): Highlights from the
“setting” portion of your
Proposal, detail of their background, Descriptive paragraph
form interview.
-2 pages): Displayed
leaned course material, Stated
and defined the theoretical approach(s) you used to analyze the
interviewee. At least three
citations in APA format.
from this assignment.
Described what you would have done different through this
process with explanation.
Brief description of your own personal reactions associated with
one’s own aging
process.
-8
pages), grammar, spelling,
70. APA (title page, abstract, in text citations and reference page):
20 points