Personal Journal Assignment-1

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HABERAGINGPPT_Ch01.pptx

CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Health Promotion and Aging

POWERPOINTS TO ACCOMPANY

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Surgeon General 1979 report

Healthy People: The Surgeon General’s Report on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention

U.S. Public Health Service 1980 report

Promoting Health/Preventing Disease: Objectives for the Nation

U.S. Public Health Service 1990 report

Healthy People 2000

Healthy People Initiatives

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Documenting baselines, setting objectives, and monitoring progress. 2030 objectives are now being established

Health oriented, not disease oriented

Politics of healthcare

Conservatives and libertarians

Liberals and paternalists

Libertarian paternalism: A compromise opting out versus opting in

Healthy People Initiatives—cont’d

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What aging Americans have in common

Intensified demand for medical care (healthcare)

Ongoing escalation of medical costs

Health promotion, disease prevention, and chronic disease management

Screening, education, and intervention costs

Social Security and Medicare support extends lives and service needs

Aging, Health, Social, and Medical Trends

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Percentage of older adults has increased dramatically over the past century

And will continue in the future: 2020–2060

More than sixfold increase in those 65+

2030

65+ population projected to reach 20%

Age pyramid versus age rectangle

U.S. Population Growth Over Age 65

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Born in the United States between 1946 and 1964 (76 million)

Retirement

History of advocacy and future influence on society

Impact on Social Security and Medicare programs

Health and long-term care alternatives will continue to evolve to meet the needs of the boomers

Baby Boomers

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Age 85+ is the fastest growing age group

Increasingly a common stage of life

Significantly reduced ability to function fully

Service needs increase accordingly

Disability and chronic conditions

Difficulty with hearing, vision, cognition, ambulation, self-care, or independent living

The Older Old

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Centenarians

2015 Census: 77,000 people were 100 years or older

More than doubled from 1980

Census projections: 8 times more by 2050

Supercentenarians: 110 years or older

Biogerontology

Centenarians

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2014—78.9 years; 2017—78.6 years

Rising since 1900—Why a dip?

Contributing factors

Threats

U.S. ranking

Trails 49 other countries in life expectancy

Life Expectancy

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Closing gender gap

Men: 76.1 years

Women: 81.1 years

Decreasing disparity between Blacks and Whites

Top three causes of death

Heart disease

Cancer

Chronic lower respiratory diseases

Life Expectancy—cont’d

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Fastest-rising causes of death

Diabetes (lifestyle/obesity)

Alzheimer’s disease (advanced age)

Life Expectancy—cont’d

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Declining hospital stays for age 65+

Increasing medication costs among Medicare enrollees

Advertising of expensive brand-name drugs

Generic drug cost increase

Medicare Part D—Ban on the government negotiating lower medication costs

Hospital Stays and Medication Use

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Slightly better health habits than younger adults

Tendency of older men to be married, not widowed

Increased percentage in workforce

Education: Increased percentage with degrees

Decreased poverty

Voting clout protects Medicare and Social Security

General Health Habits in Older Adults

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Public Health Service components

Disease prevention

Health protection

Health promotion

Prevention categories

Primary

Secondary

Tertiary

Healthy Aging

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Wellness

Alternative activities

Seven dimensions of wellness

Antiaging versus proaging movement

Compression of morbidity

Is it increasing or decreasing?

Healthy Aging—cont’d

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Health expectancy versus life expectancy

Reciprocal relationship between physical and emotional health aspects

Leading-edge boomers

Trailing-edge boomers

Intergenerational conflict

Health Perspectives and Aging

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Medicare

Helps persons age 65+ pay for medical care

Medicare Part A

Medicare Part B

Medicare Part C

Medicare Part D

Medicaid

Covers 60% of nursing home care costs

Approximately one-third of each state’s budget

Legislation

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Medicaid differs from Medicare

Not focused primarily on older adults

State-run

Funded jointly by states and federal government

Largest funding source for medical and health services for people with a limited income

Not entitlement (“welfare”)

Legislation—cont’d

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Social Security

Federal program

Partial protection from loss of earnings

An entitlement

85-year-old program (in 2020)

Legislation—cont’d

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Growth of U.S. healthcare spending

United States: 18% of GDP

Other developed countries: between 9% and 11%

WHO ranking of U.S. healthcare versus other countries

Quality: 37th

Life expectancy: 50th

Affordable Care Act reduced percent uninsured

Healthcare and Medical Care

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Healthcare

60% of early deaths due to behavioral, social, and environmental circumstances

10% of early deaths due to shortfalls in medical care

3% of expenditures targeted toward health promotion and disease prevention

Less than 1% spent on helping individuals to change unhealthy behaviors

Healthcare and Medical Care—cont’d

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