Physical and Sociological Development of Aging in the Past 50 Years

1807 Words4 Pages

Aging is an aspect of life which, regardless of race or culture, we all face and during this piece of work many of the characteristics of aging will be discussed, these will include the potential illnesses/diseases which are incurred that may have an effect on the elderly, along with critically examining the reasons for the changes in the aging process, both psychologically and sociologically over the past fifty years, in the respect of the life expectancy rate along with cultural and social changes which has incurred such a drastic change compared to today’s modern time’s. It will also identify the needs of the older generation, taking into account the barriers which an older person may face within society and discuss the possible breakdowns of the extended family. Having had such a drastic change within Western society since the fifties, it is of course inevitable that the process of aging has also changed and with new found drugs and the introduction of the National Health Service (NHS) in 1948 (www.nhs.uk) it became far more assessable for people to get treatment which in turn has enabled people to live longer and McCrystal (1997) states that in 2030 it is possible for as many as 30,000 people over the age of 100 in comparison to 1951 where there was only 271 people over the age of 100. There is however an increasingly growing pressure on the NHS to provide care for a population which living much longer, however it could be argued that the elderly provide a greater support to today’s society as age is a singular persons perspective, for example Kastenbaum’s ‘Growing Old, Years of Fulfilment’ (1979, cited in Gross, 1999) whereby he suggests that a person has a chronological, biological, subjective and functional age so effectiv...

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