"Aging" Essays and Research Papers

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    Aging Experience

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    After performing the various aging activities‚ I can understand the difficulty that an aging individual experiences. Trying to read the magazine‚ with my reading glasses and only one good eye was a challenge and my vision blurry. I had to really focus and concentrate on the words and I started to get a headache. Vision loss or “presbyopia‚ begins in the fourth decade of life causes most middle-aged older adults to need corrective lenses to accommodate close and detailed work” (Eliopoulos‚ 2014)

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    The Aging Process

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    The Aging Process As we grow in to adulthood‚ many things start to change in our life. Aging is an unavoidable process‚ beginning at conception and ending with death. The process does not proceed at a uniform rate all over the body. As we age‚ the organ systems of individuals age at different rates. Our body gradually slows down in early adult life. These changes are not apparent until perhaps 50 years of age as they are not perceptible. The skeletal system gradually changes

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    Aging Parents

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    Cited: Berman‚ Claire. “Caring For Yourself While Caring For Your Aging Parents.” New York: Henry Holt and Company‚ Inc. 1996. Greenberg‚ Vivian E. “Your Best is Not Good Enough.” Massachusetts: Lexington Books. 1989. Levy‚ Michael T.‚ M.D. “Parenting Mom and Dad: A Guide For the Grown-Up Children of Aging Parents.” New York: Prentice Hall Press. 1991. Loverde‚ Joy. “The Complete Eldercare Planner.” rev. ed. New York: Hyperion. 1997.

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    Aging Workforce

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    excerpted or redistributed in any form without express written permission of WorldatWork and appropriate attribution. Reach WorldatWork at 480/922-2020; customerrelations@worldatwork.org The Aging Workforce: Challenge or Opportunity? M Roselyn R. Feinsod Towers Perrin uch has been written about the aging of the working population and the potential implications this trend holds for employers‚ financial markets and the overall economy. The possible workforce scenarios predicted to play out

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    Aging Parenting

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    Generation after generation aging parents become the responsibility of the following generation. It’s the way life is set up to work. However‚ just taking care of ourselves is a full time job‚ let alone a parent or other family member that needs assistance in their later years. For most‚ taking care of an aging parent is an act of love‚ but for many it’s a job they would rather hand over to someone else. Because of the fast‚ busy and full pace of life‚ many younger people simply don’t have the

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    Memory & Aging

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    loss has long been recognized as a common accompaniment of aging. The inability to recall the name of a recent acquaintance or the contents of a short shopping list are familiar experiences for everyone‚ and this experience seems to become more common as we age. Over the last few decades‚ the medical community has changed its view of memory loss in the elderly. These problems were viewed in the past as inevitable accompaniments of aging‚ often referred to as “senility” or “senior moments.” More

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    Personal Aging

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    system model. New Jersey: Person Education Northeastern Univerity. (2013). The Interdisciplinary Team. Retrieved from http://www.northeastern.edu/geriatricsbiger/the_team/ Touhy‚ T.A. & Jett‚ K. (2012). Ebersole and Hess’ Toward Healthy Aging. Human needs & aging response (8th ed.). St. Louis‚ MO: Elsevier Saunders Waldman‚ P.(2012). The benefit of Medicaid: What having insurance means. Retrieved from http://prospect.org/article/benefits-medicaid. Wills‚ M.E. & McEwen‚ M. (2011). Theoretical

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    Aging in Place

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    Aging in Place Today the United States faces many challenges‚ challenges that mirror the changing world we live in as well as the changing dynamics of our country as a whole. There is more than a few issues on the horizon for America‚ and many of these issues can be tied directly to government expenditures. Not the least of which is our current position on social security spending; arguably becoming the largest Ponzi scheme the world has ever seen. However‚ it is the details that really accentuate

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    Aging Parents

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    Should people accept it as their duty to take care of their aging parents? explain‚ Give three reasons. The word duty implies that taking care of our parents is our filial responsibility. When we were children and in their care‚ I doubt taking care of us was viewed as a job. I believe they cared for us because they loved us and wanted to nurture us. Now that they have reached an age where the simple‚ everyday tasks are becoming more difficult for them‚ they need us to step up and help.

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    Cognitive Aging

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    Getting older is a time of social‚ emotional‚ mental‚ and physical change. Retirement might change how a person interacts socially every day‚ affecting a person’s mood and well-being. Cognitive aging—the normal process of cognitive change as a person gets older—can begin‚ or a permanent change in physical function may arise. Technology offers a path for people who are navigating these changes potentially to prevent or minimize the risks associated

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