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"impact of aging"
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Aging, Death, and Human Longevity
2023
With the help of medicine and technology we are living longer than ever before. As human life spans have increased, the moral and political issues surrounding longevity have become more complex. Should we desire to live as long as possible? What are the social ramifications of longer lives? How does a longer life span change the way we think about the value of our lives and about death and dying? Christine Overall offers a clear and intelligent discussion of the philosophical and cultural issues surrounding this difficult and often emotionally charged issue. Her book is unique in its comprehensive presentation and evaluation of the arguments—both ancient and contemporary—for and against prolonging life. It also proposes a progressive social policy for responding to dramatic increases in life expectancy. Writing from a feminist perspective, Overall highlights the ways that our biases about race, class, and gender have affected our views of elderly people and longevity, and her policy recommendations represent an effort to overcome these biases. She also covers the arguments surrounding the question of the \"duty to die\" and includes a provocative discussion of immortality. After judiciously weighing the benefits and the risks of prolonging human life, Overall persuasively concludes that the length of life does matter and that its duration can make a difference to the quality and value of our lives. Her book will be an essential guide as we consider our social responsibilities, the meaning of human life, and the prospects of living longer.
Impact of Aging on Three-Dimensional Facial Verification
by
Heravi, Farnaz Majid Zadeh
,
Farazdaghi, Elham
,
Fournier, Régis
in
Age groups
,
Aging
,
Computer Science
2019
Age progression is associated with poor performance of verification systems. Thus, there is a need for further research to overcome this problem. Three-dimensional facial aging modeling for employment in verification systems is highly serviceable, and able to acknowledge how variations in depth and pose can provide additional information to accurately represent faces. In this article, the impact of aging on the performance of three-dimensional facial verification is studied. For this purpose, we employed three-dimensional (3D) faces obtained from a 3D morphable face aging model (3D F-FAM). The proposed 3D F-FAM was able to simulate the facial appearance of a young adult in the future. A performance evaluation was completed based on three metrics: structural texture quality, mesh geometric distortion and morphometric landmark distances. The collection of 500 textured meshes from 145 subjects, which were used to construct our own database called FaceTim V.2.0, was applied in performance evaluation. The experimental results demonstrated that the proposed model produced satisfying results and could be applicable in 3D facial verification systems. Furthermore, the verification rates proved that the 3D faces achieved from the proposed model enhanced the performance of the 3D verification process.
Journal Article
The City of 2050 - An Age-Friendly, Vibrant, Intergenerational Community
2010
Where baby boomers choose to live in the years after retirement will dramatically affect public resources and the quality of community life for everyone in the City of 2050. Staying in one's own home as long as possible-aging-in-place-is the clear preference of most baby
boomers. A City for All Ages will be an age-friendly community that is vibrant enough to attract young people, and accommodating enough to attract the next generation of older people. By expanding the spectrum of senior housing options, the future City for All Ages will have built environments
to match each stage of life. Just as the baby boomer generation redefined every life stage, style and marketplace since the 1950s, so will they reengineer retirement living.
Journal Article
The impacts of ageing-related changes on prehospital trauma care for older adults: challenges and future directions
2025
The ageing global population presents growing challenges for prehospital trauma care, particularly in addressing the complex needs of older adults. This narrative review explores the impacts of ageing-related anatomical and physiological changes on trauma care in the prehospital setting, with a focus on the challenges they pose for paramedic assessment, triage, and decision-making. These changes affecting the nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, musculoskeletal, and renal systems that reduce physiological resilience and increase vulnerability to trauma, especially when compounded by frailty, polypharmacy, and comorbidities. The review highlights significant limitations in current trauma triage tools, which often lack sensitivity for identifying serious injuries in older adults and fail to incorporate frailty assessments. Although some protocols, such as the Ohio Trauma Triage Protocol, include geriatric adaptations, traditional tools continue to underperform, contributing to undertriage and suboptimal outcomes. Validated frailty assessment tools, including the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS), Programme on Research for Integrating Services for the Maintenance of Autonomy (PRISMA-7), and Identification of Seniors at Risk (ISAR), offer promising potential for improving triage accuracy but are not yet routinely used in prehospital practice. Key gaps identified include insufficient paramedic education on ageing-related conditions, limited awareness of age-specific clinical presentations, and a lack of training in applying geriatric assessment tools. To address these issues, the review recommends integrating frailty screening into EMS triage, enhancing geriatric-specific training, and raising paramedic awareness of the physiological and clinical implications of ageing. Future research should investigate paramedics’ behaviours, decision-making processes, and the feasibility of implementing frailty-based triage in the field. These strategies are essential to advancing prehospital trauma care and improving outcomes for the growing population of older trauma patients.
Journal Article
Ecological Aging: The Settings Approach in Aged Living and Care Accommodation
2008
As the proportion of older people increases within populations, financial demands related to the cost of health service delivery threaten global stability. This population trend challenges the traditional approach to health service delivery to older populations. This article presents the Australian context as a case study to argue that the application of a health promoting settings approach to aged care may lead to improved well-being for older people to the extent that the periods of chronic morbidity often associated with aging can be compressed into an ever shorter period of time. Promoting an ecological perspective to aged care suggests that there is no need to manage older people in isolation, as is common practice, but as integral to the way society lives, works, and plays. The article maps parallels between characteristics of health promoting settings such as Health Promoting Schools and the aged living and care industry, arguing that the setting encompassing services for the elderly is a prime location for the establishment of a new health promotion setting. Supporting life opportunities for our aged is central to such an approach. More broadly, an ecological approach orients us toward the connection between environment and health, and encourages increased attention and action within the aged living and care sector on reducing environmental impacts of this growing population. As such, the application of this approach to the aged living and care sector has the potential to reduce the threat that a dependant older population has on global sustainability.
Journal Article
Aging, Mobility, and the Model T: Approaches to Smart Community Transportation
2010
Community transportation is on the cusp of change. This article looks at the primary elements (resources and logistics) and the primary forces (technology and policy) of the community transportation systems of the past to imagine beyond the mechanical solutions and public funding mechanisms
of today's transportation systems to the future. In the future, information management technology helps to create community mobility that is consumer-oriented, age friendly, and environmentally and financially sustainable. In this new approach to community transportation, people are finding
innovative ways to achieve efficiency by traveling together in private vehicles.
Journal Article
The Future of Aging Services in America
2010
In the future people will likely work longer and reach old age in better shape. Today's older adult population will be with us, though it is likely to be more racially and culturally diverse, and many elders will have insufficient resources to meet their needs. Many advocates' worst
fears may come true in that many aging services we now know will largely disappear. Other advocates believe that the increasing focus on government rebalancing of the long-term-care system will absorb all the public resources available to care for very frail elders, precipitating the demise
of community-based services for less frail elders. Still others think that the need for these services will diminish as older peoples' needs and interests change and shift. All of these things are going to be true to some degree. Healthcare reform, higher expectations for accountability and
information exchange, and the population's needs growing faster than available resources will bring about big changes in aging services, increasing pressure for agencies to become larger and more efficient.
Journal Article
Optimising prehospital trauma triage for older adults: challenges, limitations, and future directions
by
Goodacre, Steve
,
Harthi, Naif
,
Sampson, Fiona C.
in
ageing impacts
,
Decision making
,
Emergency medical care
2025
The ageing population presents significant challenges for prehospital trauma care, with older adults experiencing higher rates of undertriage and overtriage due to age-related physiological changes, frailty, and polypharmacy. Standard trauma triage tools, primarily designed for younger populations, often fail to accurately assess injury severity in older adults, leading to delays in definitive care or unnecessary resource use. This narrative review synthesises current evidence on the limitations of existing trauma triage tools for older adults, highlighting challenges such as inconsistent implementation, paramedic training gaps, and age-related biases. The review explores the role of adjusted systolic blood pressure thresholds, frailty assessments, and geriatric-specific triage protocols in improving triage accuracy. While these modifications show promise, their integration into prehospital care remains limited due to logistical and clinical barriers. Key findings suggest that incorporating frailty assessments, refining age-specific triage criteria, and enhancing paramedic education can improve the precision of prehospital trauma triage for older adults. However, significant research gaps remain, including the need for large-scale prospective studies on geriatric-specific triage tools and investigations into the impact of triage modifications on long-term patient outcomes. Standardising geriatric triage protocols, leveraging digital decision-support tools, and addressing disparities in trauma centre access are critical to optimising prehospital care for older trauma patients. Future research should focus on refining triage strategies to enhance decision-making and ensure that older adults receive timely, appropriate trauma care, ultimately reducing preventable morbidity and improving patient outcomes.
Journal Article
Aging in Europe: Reforms, International Diversification, and Behavioral Reactions
2014
The extent of demographic changes in Europe is much more drastic than in the United States. This paper studies the effects of population aging on the interactions between economic growth and living standards in Europe with labor market and pension reform, behavioral adaptations, and international capital flows. Our analysis is based on an overlapping generations model with behavioral reactions to reform which is extended to the multi-country situation typical for Europe. While the negative effects of population aging on growth in Europe can in principle be compensated by reforms and economic adaptation mechanisms, they may be partially offset by behavioral reactions.
Journal Article
Home, Community, and Gerontocracy: Forecasting the Future of Senior Housing
2010
Type 2 flats have an additional three functions: a built-in grid system for loudspeakers in the living room, kitchen, and bathroom; a security camera at the front door and one at the lobby reception box, where delivery people can leave groceries, dry-cleaning, and mail. [...] there are two Type 3 flats where residents can transition into assisted living without moving out of the building. Aging in place will be easier when more homes and communities give residents the option of buying levels of assistive technology as needed.
Journal Article