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ALGUnitIII--MiddleAdulthood.pptx

Human development Unit III

Young Adulthood (Early 20’s-Early 40’s) Middle Adulthood (early 40’s-early 60’s) & Late Adulthood (early 60’s-death)

Unit III

Unit III (Young Adulthood-Late Adulthood)

Young Adulthood (Early 20’s-Early 40’s)

Middle Adulthood (Early 40’s-Early 60’s)

Late Adulthood (Early 60’s-Death)

Middle adulthood

Physical, Cognitive & Socioemotional

Middle Adult Years (Early 40’s-Early 60’s)

Changing Midlife

Boundaries of middle age are being pushed upward

More people lead healthier lifestyles; medical discoveries are holding off the aging process

Middle age is starting later and lasting longer

Midlife serves as an important preparation for late adulthood

An increasing percentage of the population is made up of middle-aged and older adults

“Rectangularization” of the age distribution

Generativity vs. Stagnation

Erikson’s Generativity vs. Stagnation (40-65):

Generativity: adults’ desire to leave legacies of themselves to the next generation

Stagnation: develops when individuals sense that they have done nothing for the next generation

Research supports Erikson’s theory

Generativity: adults’ desire to leave legacies of themselves to the next generation

Biological generativity

Parental generativity

Work generativity

Cultural generativity

For many, middle age is a time for:

Declining physical skills and increasing responsibility

An awareness of the young-old polarity

Transmitting something meaningful to the next generation

Reaching and maintaining career satisfaction

A reassessment of life’s priorities

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Physical Changes

Physical Changes:

Usually gradual; aging rates vary

Wrinkling and sagging of skin, age spots, thinning gray hair, thicker brittle nails, yellowing of teeth

Height tends to shrink in middle age, due to bone loss in the vertebrae

Many gain weight, which is a critical health problem in middle adulthood

Sarcopenia: age-related loss of muscle mass and strength, specially common in the back and legs -- exercise can reduce these declines

Cushions for bone movement become less efficient, often leading to joint stiffness and difficulty in movement

Progressive bone loss

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Physical Changes

Ability to focus and maintain an image declines between 40–59 years

Difficulty viewing close objects

Reduced blood supply decreases visual field

Hearing can start to decline by age 40

Hearing loss occurs in up to 50% of individuals over the age of 50

High-pitched sounds are typically lost first

Physical Changes

Blood pressure typically rises in the 40’s and 50’s

At menopause, a woman’s blood pressure rises sharply, remaining higher than that of men into the later years

Metabolic Syndrome: a condition characterized by hypertension, obesity, and insulin resistance

Exercise, weight control, and a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains can help to reduce many cardiovascular problems

Lung tissue becomes less elastic at about age 55

Decreases lung’s capacity

Nonsmokers have much better lung capacity

Wakeful periods become more frequent in the 40’s

Less deep sleep (stage 4)

Feeling less rested in the morning

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Health and Disease

Frequency of accidents declines

Individuals are less susceptible to colds and allergies

Stress is a key factor in disease, especially if cumulative

Immune system functioning decreases with normal aging

Chronic emotional stress is associated with high blood pressure, heart disease, and early death

Culture plays an important role in coronary disease

Ni-Hon-San Study

Chronic Disorders: characterized by a slow onset and a long duration

Rare in early adulthood but increase in middle age

Men have higher rates of fatal chronic conditions, while women have higher rates of nonfatal chronic conditions

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Mortality Rates

Chronic diseases are the main cause of death during middle adulthood

Heart disease

Cancer

Cerebrovascular disease

In the 1st half of middle age, cancer claims more lives than heart disease; trend is reversed during the 2nd half of middle age

Men have higher mortality rates than women

Sexuality

Climacteric: the midlife transition in which fertility declines

Menopause: time in middle age (late 40’s to early 50’s) when a woman’s menstrual periods completely cease

Perimenopause: transitional period; often takes up to 10 years

Heredity and experience influence the onset of menopause

Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is controversial because it has been linked to increased risk of stroke, dementia, and cancer

Cross-cultural studies show that the menopausal experience varies among women, but it is not generally as negative as it was once thought to be

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Sexuality

Hormonal Changes in Men:

Most men do not lose the ability to father children

Modest decline in sexual hormone level and activity

Erectile Dysfunction is common in middle-aged men

May stem from physiological problems

Sexual Attitudes and Behavior:

Sexual activity occurs less frequently in middle adulthood

Middle-aged men are more interested in sex than middle-aged women

Living with a spouse or partner makes all the difference in terms of engaging in sexual activity

Cognitive Development

Crystallized Intelligence: an individual’s accumulated information and verbal skills

Continues to increase throughout life

Fluid Intelligence: the ability to reason abstractly

May begin to decline in middle adulthood

Some cognitive functions peak during middle adulthood, while others decline

Depends on how studies are conducted

Cross-sectional studies show more decline than longitudinal studies

Starting in late middle age, more time is needed to learn new information

The Seattle Longitudinal Study: study of intellectual abilities in adulthood years

Peak performance on vocabulary, verbal memory, inductive reasoning, and spatial orientation was attained in middle age

Decline in numerical ability and perceptual speed

Declines in memory, word fluency, and perceptual speed in middle adulthood were linked to neuropsychologists’ ratings of individuals’ cognitive impairment in late adulthood

Extensive individual differences

Speed of information processing declines moderately during middle adulthood

Multiple potential causes

Memory declines may occur exclusively during the later part of middle age or in late adulthood

Memory decline is more likely to occur when individuals do not use effective memory strategies

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Religion and Adult Lives

More than 70% of middle-aged adults are religious and consider spirituality a major part of their lives

Role of individual differences

Increase in spirituality tends to occur between late middle adulthood and late adulthood

Women have consistently shown a stronger interest in religion than males

Religious commitment helps to moderate blood pressure and hypertension and is associated with increased longevity

Religion and Adult Lives

Baumeister has argued that the quest for the meaning of life may be understood in terms of four main needs:

Need for purpose

Need for values

Need for a sense of efficacy

Need for self-worth

Frankl (1984) emphasized each person’s uniqueness and the finiteness of life

Frankl identified the three most distinct human qualities as:

Spirituality

Freedom

Responsibility

In middle adulthood, the reality of approaching death often forces people to examine the meaning of their life

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Stages of Adulthood

How pervasive are midlife crises?

Vaillant’s “Grant Study”:

The 40’s are a decade of reassessing and recording the truth about the adolescent and adult years

Only a minority of adults experience a midlife crisis

Reports of general well-being and life satisfaction tend to be high during mid-life

Another study found that 26% of adults experienced a midlife crisis

Most attributed this to negative life events rather than aging

Adult developmental experts generally agree that midlife crises have been exaggerated

Adults often experience a peak of personal control and power during middle age

Adults’ ability to master their environment, autonomy, and personal relations improve during middle age

Adult developmental experts generally agree that midlife crises have been exaggerated

In general, stage theories place too much emphasis on crises in development

There is often considerable individual variation in the way people experience the stages

Individual Variations:

Stage theories do not adequately address individual variations in adult development

Some individuals may experience a midlife crisis in some contexts of their lives but not others

In 1/3 of cases where individuals report experiencing a midlife crisis, the crisis was triggered by life events such as job loss, financial problems, or illness

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Is Our Personality Stable?

The Baltimore Study used the big five factors of personality to study 1,000 college-educated persons aged 20 to 96 starting from the 1950s and continuing today:

Considerable stability in the five personality factors

Agreeableness and conscientiousness increased in early and middle adulthood

Neuroticism decreased in early adulthood

Openness to experience increased in adolescence/early adulthood and then decreased in late adulthood

What about Love and Marriage?

Romantic love is typically strong in early adulthood

Affectionate love increases during middle adulthood

Most married individuals are satisfied with their marriages during midlife

Divorce in midlife can be less intense due to increased resources and lessened child-rearing responsibilities

However, emotional and time commitment to a long-lasting marriage is typically not given up easily

Staying married because of the children is a common reason for waiting to get a divorce

The Empty Nest

Empty Nest Syndrome: a decline in marital satisfaction after the children leave the home

For most parents, marital satisfaction actually increases during the years after child rearing

Refilling of empty nest is becoming a common occurrence

Adult children are returning to live at home for financial reasons

Loss of privacy is a common complaint for both parents and adult children

Grand parenting

Many adults become grandparents during middle age

Grandmothers have more contact with grandchildren than grandfathers

Three prominent meanings:

Source of biological reward and continuity

Source of emotional self-fulfillment

Remote role

The grandparent role and its functions vary among families, ethnic groups, and cultures

Grandparenting

Three Grandparenting Styles:

Fun-seeking style

Distant-figure style

Formal style

An increasing number of U.S. grandchildren live with their grandparents

2.3 million in 1980; 6.1 million in 2005

Most common reasons are divorce, adolescent pregnancies, and parental drug use

Tends to be more stressful for younger grandparents, when grandchildren have physical and psychological problems, and when there is low family cohesion

Grandparents who take in grandchildren are in better health, are better educated, are more likely to be working outside the home, and are younger than grandparents who move in with their children

Concern over grandparent visitation of children has become more common

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Intergenerational Relationships

Differences in gender:

Mothers and daughters have closer relationships during their adult years than mothers and sons, fathers and daughters, and fathers and sons

Married men are more involved with their wives’ families than with their own

Maternal aunts and grandmothers are cited as the most important or loved relative twice as often as their paternal counterparts

Middle-aged and older adults typically express a strong feeling of responsibility between generations in their family

They share their experiences and transmit values to the younger generation

Family members typically maintain considerable contact across generations

When conflicts arise, parents most often cite habits and lifestyle choices, while adult children cite communication and interaction styles

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STABILITY AND CHANGE

Vaillant’s Studies: conducted three longitudinal studies from the 1920s through today:

Alcohol abuse and smoking at age 50 was the best predictor of death between ages 75 and 80

Factors at age 50 which are best predictors of “happy-well” between ages 75 and 80:

Regular exercise and avoiding being overweight

Well-educated and future oriented

Having a stable marriage and good coping skills

Being thankful, forgiving, and empathetic

Being active with other people

Middle Age Issues: Mid-Life Crises?

Menopause: Menstruation ends and a woman is no longer able to bear children. Estrogen levels also drop, sometimes causing mood or appearance changes.

Hot flashes: Sudden uncomfortable sensation of heat; symptom of menopause in some women

Climacteric: When men experience a significant change in vigor or appearance; may be psychological in origin

Andropause: Reduced testosterone levels; can lead to decreased sex drive, fatigue, and obesity

Empty Nest Syndrome: A woman may become depressed after her last child leaves home