Barbara Gray and Bernard Isaacs, Care of the Elderly Mentally Infirm, Sweet and Maxwell, Spon (Booksellers), Andover, 1980. x + 220 pp. £4.50 paper; Alison J. Norman, Rights and Risk: a discussion document on civil liberty in old age from NCCOP, The National Corporation for the Care of Old People, London, 1980. 96 pp. £2.20 paper; Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Socio-Economic Policies for the Elderly, OECD, Paris 1979, HMSO London, 1979. 168 pp. £4.20 paper.

1981 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 281-283
Author(s):  
Paul Brearley
2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 291
Author(s):  
Kati Caetano ◽  
Ivania Skura ◽  
Nanachara Carolina Sperb

O trabalho objetiva discutir representações visuais da velhice, ou do envelhecimento, tendo como horizonte empírico discursos publicitários, de caráter protocolar, sobre o saber envelhecer; retratos fotográficos de pessoas velhas em cujos rostos estão impressas as marcas do tempo e das interações; e imagens de relações amorosas ou sexuais entre idosos, em que a questão do desejo se inscreve para além do culturalmente desejável e se manifesta na con-formação dos corpos em presença. Pretende-se tecer reflexões sócio-estéticas transversais sobre os três corpora e os jogos de visibilidade que engendram. The article aims to discuss visual representations of old age, or of aging, having as an empirical horizon advertising speeches, of character protocol, on the knowledge to grow old; photographic portraits of old people in whose faces are imprinted the marks of time and interactions; and images of love or sexual relations among the elderly, in which the question of desire is inscribed beyond the culturally desirable and manifested in the conformation of the bodies in the presence. It is intended to weave transverse socio-aesthetic reflections on the three corpora and the games of visibility they engender.


2021 ◽  
pp. 9-12
Author(s):  
M.M. Bikbov ◽  
◽  
T.R. Gilmanshin ◽  
R.M. Zainullin ◽  
G.M. Kazakbaeva ◽  
...  

Currently, the percentage of old people is growing from year to year in developed countries their share ranges from 10 to 15% of the entire population. In connection with such trends the issue of old age should be given special attention. Purpose. Identify the main risk factors and assess the incidence of ophthalmopathology among the elderly. Material and methods. In Ufa Eye Research Institute was examined 1526 people over 85 years old. Ophthalmological examination included standard and additional diagnostic methods: ultrasound biometry, keratotopography, computed perimetry, ophthalmoscopy using a fundus camera, optical coherence tomography. Results. The main cause of vision loss in the elderly was cataract – 41.7%, followed by AMD – 32.6%, then glaucoma – 10.1%, other eye diseases – 8.1%, optic disc pathology – 54.1% and diabetic angioretinopathy – 2.4%. The most significant association of the ophthalmopathology development is associated with such factors as age, gender, region of residence, axial length of the eye. Conclusions. Timely detection of ophthalmic pathology among old people will allow to preserve the patients visual functions, increase the social rehabilitation level and ensure their active and creative longevity. Key words: old age, cataracts, age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma.


1976 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven R. Smith

It is difficult to generalize about how people at any point in time view the process of growing old and the aged themselves. Attitudes towards old people have perhaps always been ambiguous and are probably ambiguous in western societies today. In seventeenth-century England, which in so many ways combined tradition and modernity, the ambivalent attitude towards the elderly included both traditional and modern aspects in three ways. First, as with traditional societies, early modern Englishmen looked upon old age as simply another stage in life, one of the seven through which all persons must pass; at the same time, old age was seen as something entirely different, a reversal of all previous stages. The latter view, which sociologists have labeled the “implicit” view, sees life as a constant process of expansion and growth until one reaches old age when the process is halted and reversed. Secondly, as in other traditional societies, old age was seen as a period of great dignity and wisdom, with the elderly deserving the respect and admiration of all other persons. Alongside this view in seventeenth-century England, old age was thought of as a time of folly and old people were described in undesirable terms. Thirdly, there were two ways of looking at death and its nearness: the traditional Christian view, held by many seventeenth-century theologians, was that death was entirely in God's hands and was a relief from the suffering of earthly life. The more modern view, held by others in the seventeenth-century, was that death was postponable by sensible precautions or by the science of medicine. Drawing on the literature of the age, this article will attempt to show old age in all of these various ways and point out the ambiguities.


1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rob Houtepen

ABSTRACTDaniel Callahan has maintained that a common understanding of the meaning of old age and the proper role of old people in society is a prerequisite for decisions on the distribution of health-care resources to the elderly. The call for such a common understanding is traced to the writings of Thomas Cole and Harry Moody. A discussion of their ideas is followed by a philosophical analysis of communitarian accounts of meaning and the good life in general. It is concluded that viable interpretations of the meaning of old age should comply with the values of liberal individualism. Meaning should be localised less at the level of global ideas and images and more at the level of local and heterogeneous practices. The practice of distributing health-care resources cannot and should not be regulated by communitarian interpretations of the value of old age. It would seem to be sufficiently infused by liberal individualist interpretations of meaning and justice.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 9-13
Author(s):  
V.N. Egorova ◽  
◽  
U.A. Azarova ◽  

Currently, the questions of how older people fit into the context of modern reality, to what extent their inherent life ideas are consistent with existing social norms are becoming relevant. The history of the development of attitudes towards the elderly, the position of old people is constantly changing. It is known that the life of old people largely depends on their social status in society. The article presents the results of studying the attitude of young people and people of mature age in Yakutia to old age and readiness to care for the elderly. The study involved representatives of young and mature age in the amount of 222, including 109 men, 113 women. 142 (64%) respondents live in cities, 80 (36%) - in rural areas. 68 (31%) of the respondents have higher education, the rest - secondary, 85.3% of the respondents are of mature age and 14.7% of young people live with their parents. The analysis of ethnographic works, folklore materials was used as research methods; survey method. The reliability of the difference in indicators was checked using the angular Fisher transformation. Analysis of the research results allows us to note that respondents treat elderly people with patience and care, however, young people tend to be indifferent to aging parents. The attitude towards the placement of parents in nursing homes is also noticeably different: young people are ready to place their parents in nursing homes if the circumstances are difficult. Comparison was also made of the opinions of representatives of different nationalities about their attitude to old age, and their willingness to care for elderly parents, it found that they also differ. Comparison of the research indicators showed that there is a high connection with the family among representatives of the small peoples of the north, they are also more re- sponsible for their parents, although in other nations, the readiness to care for the elderly is high among the Yakuts (p <0.05). In the future, the study of attitudes towards old age will be relevant, since the aging of the population is observed throughout the world.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 702-702
Author(s):  
B. Vukovic ◽  
D. Markovic-Zigic

Depression in older people is related to the population over 65 years. The age of depression often go with chronic illnesses, various physical and mental diseases.Depression in old age is not a natural part. In the elderly population 1.4% suffered from severe depression. Compared with the rest of the population prevalence of major depression is twice as large in the age group of 70–85 years. Less severe depression have an instance 4–13%. Twice as many women than men have depression. The prevalence of depression is particularly high in the elderly with dementia.In this report we present how many old people in Serbia suffer of depression and what is new tendence in therapy.


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