Current:Home > ContactRedefining old age -EquityZone
Redefining old age
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:14:01
There's an old saying among doctors: if you've seen one 80-year-old, you've seen one 80-year-old. Some will act like they're 60 or 70, while others seem a lot older. So, instead of asking How old is too old?, shouldn't the question be, How old is too old for what function?
"Absolutely. I could not agree more," said Dr. Louise Aronson, a geriatrician and professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. Her bestselling book "Elderhood" is about redefining old age. "I honestly think anybody who's lived past their 40s knows age matters," she said. "Your body changes, your brain changes. What I would like to see is a conversation where we actually discuss the things that matter."
But it get tricky, when you have wisdom brushing up against decreasing cognitive function.
A healthy human brain has up to 100 billion nerve cells making trillions of connections with each other. Recent research suggests a normal part of aging involves forgetting less important memories to help make room for new ones. The problem comes when normal forgetting is coupled with an abnormal process causing dementia.
Dr. LaPook said, "I would say by far the biggest fear my patients have is that they're losing it. And very often it'll start with, 'I couldn't think of the name. I mean, it was somebody who I know so well.' How important is that? How worried should they?"
"I would say they should not be worried," Aronson replied.
And what about misplacing objects? "Sometimes it's a matter of attention," Aronson said. "So, what may be happening in situations where people said, 'I couldn't find my keys,' is that they weren't paying enough attention to the keys. Maybe they were talking to someone when they put them down and consequently that memory isn't within their grasp in the way they would hope."
But if they find the keys and don't know what the keys do? "Oh, that's a bigger problem!" Aronson said.
- Dr. Sanjay Gupta's prescription for fighting off dementia ("Sunday Morning")
That distinction between normal and abnormal aging is increasingly important as the number of older workers continues to grow. In most cases, mandatory retirement at a certain age is illegal, but there are exceptions when public safety is at stake: for example, FBI agents must retire at 57, commercial airline pilots at 65.
But there are no age limits for surgeons.
Dr. Mark Katlic, a thoracic surgeon and chief of surgery for LifeBridge Health in Baltimore, said, "When I lecture about this subject of older surgeons around the country, I ask my audience who in the audience has encountered the surgeon who should have stopped operating before he or she did, and the majority of hands go up."
In 2015, Katlic created the Aging Surgeon Program, a two-day physical and cognitive evaluation open to older surgeons from anywhere in the world. His multidisciplinary team of doctors – including geriatricians and neurologists, physical and occupational therapists, ethicists and lawyers – built a comprehensive, objective evaluation of the surgeon's physical and cognitive faculty.
Asked what the initial response was of the surgeons who were going to be subjected to this, Katlic replied, "Almost everyone comes kicking and screaming and not wanting to come."
And what precipitates them being sent there in the first place? "Something has been identified as being problematic," Katlic said.
Aside from evaluating surgeons flagged with a possible problem, LifeBridge is one of the few hospital systems in the country where all doctors and nurses over the age of 75 receive a neurocognitive assessment every two years. Dr. Katlic, 72, says tests like these actually help fight ageism by focusing on function rather than on chronological age. He said, "I think you can make a very strong case for anybody who's in a high-impact profession – doctors, airline pilots, high government officials – they should have some sort of screening at some age. In fact, I would take away the mandatory retirement for airline pilots and others. If you're okay, the test will show you're okay."
Aronson said, "We've added a couple of decades, essentially an entire generation, onto our lives, and we haven't kind of socio-culturally figured out how to handle that."
- More Americans are working into old age
- It's never too late to be a late bloomer ("Sunday Morning")
Figuring out how to handle that, says Aronson, might just mean embracing the realities of getting older while realizing the end of working doesn't have to mean the end of a meaningful life. "We need ways of letting people work when they still can, and of helping them to stop working when that's in their interest and the interest of the common good," she said.
LaPook said, "But the problem is that we really haven't figured out a way of giving people a gentle off-ramp to whatever it is that they're doing, that preserves their dignity and their sense of who they are?"
"Yeah, almost all of us will live to that phase of life," Aronson said. "And so, if nothing but the most selfish of reasons, we should be doing that right now."
For more info:
- Louise Aronson, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University
- "Elderhood: Redefining Aging, Transforming Medicine, Reimagining Life" by Louise Aronson (Bloomsbury), in Hardcover, Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- Mark Katlic, chief of surgery, LifeBridge Health Systems, Baltimore
- The Aging Surgeon Program
Story produced by Mark Hudspeth. Editor: Remington Korper.
See also:
- Fighting back against ageism ("Sunday Morning")
- More Americans are working into old age
- "Sunday Morning" special: "Forever Young: Searching for the Fountain of Youth"
Dr. Jonathan LaPook is the chief medical correspondent for CBS News.
TwitterveryGood! (49192)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Q&A: A Republican Congressman Hopes to Spread a New GOP Engagement on Climate from Washington, D.C. to Glasgow
- Inside Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor's Private Family Life With Their Kids
- Here's what's at stake in Elon Musk's Tesla tweet trial
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Donald Trump Jr. subpoenaed for Michael Cohen legal fees trial
- Can China save its economy - and ours?
- Coal-Fired Power Plants Hit a Milestone in Reduced Operation
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Billion-Dollar Disasters: The Costs, in Lives and Dollars, Have Never Been So High
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Rental application fees add up fast in a tight market. But limiting them is tough
- To Understand How Warming is Driving Harmful Algal Blooms, Look to Regional Patterns, Not Global Trends
- Will 2021 Be the Year for Environmental Justice Legislation? States Are Already Leading the Way
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Inside Clean Energy: Rooftop Solar Wins Big in Kansas Court Ruling
- Rain, flooding continue to slam Northeast: The river was at our doorstep
- Microsoft slashes 10,000 jobs, the latest in a wave of layoffs
Recommendation
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Judge overseeing Trump documents case agrees to push first pretrial conference
Two Indicators: The 2% inflation target
The Acceleration of an Antarctic Glacier Shows How Global Warming Can Rapidly Break Up Polar Ice and Raise Sea Level
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
In a Dry State, Farmers Use Oil Wastewater to Irrigate Their Fields, but is it Safe?
China's economic growth falls to 3% in 2022 but slowly reviving
Tom Brady, Justin Timberlake and More Stars Celebrate Father's Day 2023