scholarly journals Personal, behavioral, and perceived environmental factors associated with late-life depression in older men and women

2019 ◽  
Vol Volume 12 ◽  
pp. 641-650
Author(s):  
Chien-Yu Lin ◽  
Bohyeon Kim ◽  
Yung Liao ◽  
Jong-Hwan Park
Author(s):  
Torbjörn Bildtgård ◽  
Peter Öberg

To repartner in later life is increasingly common in large parts of the Western world. This book addresses the gap in knowledge about late life repartnering and provides a comprehensive map of the changing landscape of late life intimacy. The book examines the changing structural conditions of intimacy and ageing in late modernity. How do longer lives, changing norms and new technologies affect older people’s relationship careers, their attitudes to repartnering and the formation of new relationships? Which forms do these new unions take? What does a new intimate relationship offer older men and women and what are the consequences for social integration? What is the role and meaning of sex? By introducing a gains-perspective the book challenges stereotypes of old age as a period of loss and decline. It also challenges the image of older people as conservative, and instead present them as an avant-garde that often experiment with new ways of being together.


2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (12) ◽  
pp. 1554-1561 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. D. Toffanello ◽  
G. Sergi ◽  
N. Veronese ◽  
E. Perissinotto ◽  
S. Zambon ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. S49
Author(s):  
S. Sarti ◽  
E.D. Toffanello ◽  
G. Sergi ◽  
N. Veronese ◽  
E. Perissinotto ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Benoît Verdon

Since the 1950s, the growing interest of clinicians in using projective tests to study normal or pathological aging processes has led to the creation of several thematic tests for older adults. This development reflects their authors’ belief that the TAT is not suitable to the concerns and anxieties of elderly persons. The new material thus refers explicitly to situations related to age; it aims to enable older persons to express needs they cannot verbalize during consultations. The psychodynamic approach to thematic testing is based on the differentiation between the pictures’ manifest and latent content, eliciting responses linked to mental processes and issues the respondent is unaware of. The cards do not necessarily have to show aging characters to elicit identification: The situations shown in the pictures are linked to loss, rivalry, helplessness, and renunciation, all issues elderly respondents can identify with and that lead them to express their mental fragilities and resources. The article first explains the principles underlying four of these thematic tests, then develops several examples of stories told for card 3BM of the TAT, thus showing the effectiveness of this tool for the understanding and differentiation of loss-related issues facing older men and women.


Author(s):  
Tiffany Hale

To identify Clyde Warrior as an intellectual subverts prevailing notions of intellectualism. We often think of intellectuals as older men and women whose major contributions are revealed late in life, once the passions of youth have been tempered by experience. Warrior was not this. People frequently imagine intellectuals as existing in isolation, insulated from the demands of regular folk. Warrior was not this either. He was a Ponca, born on the reservation and raised with the influence of his grandparents and community. He was also a renowned singer and powwow fancy dancer, as well as a college student, an organizational leader, a husband, and father of two daughters. Warrior’s political consciousness grew out of the deep connections he maintained to his rural Ponca roots, but he took care to educate himself about the problems affecting Native Americans across the United States as well as colonized peoples globally. As an Oklahoman, he was attuned to race relations in the South and empathized with the struggles of Africans and African Americans. His approach to indigenous political struggles was shaped and informed, for example, by his early and active participation with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and Martin Luther King Jr.’s Poor People’s Campaign.


Author(s):  
Estella Musacchio ◽  
Pierluigi Binotto ◽  
Fatima Silva-Netto ◽  
Egle Perissinotto ◽  
Leonardo Sartori

2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin J. Manning ◽  
Grace Chan ◽  
David C. Steffens ◽  
Cortnee W. Pierce ◽  
Guy G. Potter

2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 2142-2151 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. F. Pluijm ◽  
M. Visser ◽  
J. H. Smit ◽  
C. Popp-Snijders ◽  
J. C. Roos ◽  
...  

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