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Society That Has A Much Higher Percentage Essay

¶ … society that has a much higher percentage of older adults than any previous generation. Still, older adults are often marginalized and rarely interact with younger people, many believing "old people" have nothing to offer. The modern environment is faced with a number of problems that directly relate to aging. A number of methods to reduce the effects of time are thought to be new and innovative, when often; it is many tried and true methods that are the most efficacious. This is as important for medical specialists, geriatric caregivers, and even family caregivers -- those in the trenches who are faced with the daunting and daily tasks of helping to care for our aged. They know that using physical activity to bolster biological reactions is one of these methods that work -- and now science has proven that certain chemicals are released when one is active, amused or happy that indeed, aid in learning, comprehension, and anti-aging. In any number of Ancient Societies, there was an overriding philosophy that the quality of one's life was central to their own actualization and ability to be happy. Many of these societies held that, at least for the upper classes, quality of life was just as vital as living -- and was an individual decision. Modern medical science has progressed to the point in which certain heroic measures can keep the body functioning, yet the quality of life may remain indeterminate. In the same manner, there are a number of external activities and support measures that can considerably increase the perception of quality of life in survivors of certain cancers, serious injury or surgery, or even recovery from what might be considered debilitating illness. Quality of life is a unique philosophical issue. It is used within the medical, legal, and sociological community to mean something general, yet individually specific. In general, the term "quality of life" is an evaluator term that is used to rank...

It is not an economic standard of living, but rather an indicator of a person's perception of environment, physical and mental health, education, recreation and leisure time enjoyment and ability to interact, social belonging, and a general world view of interaction. In fact critical relationships with women 55 years and older show that there are differing and require a number of interventions designed to increase particular quality of life issues (physical, mental, and social) (Tannenbaum, et.al, 2006; Costanza, et al., 2008).
Analysis -- The authors of the study on older women's perceptions were concerned mainly with age-related differences in the perceptions of quality of life. They used a model in which they tested relationships between constructs between women 55 and 70; with some data coming from younger and older women to round out the statistical analysis. Their research was broad based, asking the right questions, and understandably only the first step in a larger, more longitudinal series of studies.

There is a limited amount of material in the literature review; however, this is understandable because there are only limited amounts of research available on this subject matter. Methodologically, there was a relatively large sample (2,311 women 55 years and older) who responded to a survey entitled What Women Want. The participants were women living in private households randomly selected by use of Canadian Post. On average, the respondents were slightly healthier and better educated than the average senior Canadian woman, but in all other aspects generally similar in terms of demographics. A second independent verification sample was derived from 473 women over 55 who attended an outpatient clinic in the Greater Montreal area of Quebec. The model used was robust, including self-perceptions of physical, mental, and social…

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REFERENCES

Costanza, R., et al. (2008). An Integrative Approach to Quality of Life Measurement,

Research and Policy. Sapiens Journal. 1 (1). Cited in:

http://sapiens.revues.org/169

Johannson, M., et al., (2006). Living with Incurable Cancer at the End of Life -- Patients'
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