Aging in Today's Environment

Aging in Today's Environment
Title Aging in Today's Environment PDF eBook
Author National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Chemical Toxicity and Aging
Publisher National Academies
Pages 238
Release 1987
Genre Family & Relationships
ISBN

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This report examines the relationships between aging and exposure to environmental agents (including natural and man-made agents, as well as life-style factors). Several relationships must be considered--the impact of intermittent or lifelong exposure to environmental agents on the rate of aging, the impact of lifelong exposure on health status when one reaches more advanced age, and the special response of the aged compared with that of the young when exposed to environmental agents.

Environment and Aging

Environment and Aging
Title Environment and Aging PDF eBook
Author Mortimer Powell Lawton
Publisher Study of Aging
Pages 232
Release 1986
Genre Political Science
ISBN

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Aging and Milieu

Aging and Milieu
Title Aging and Milieu PDF eBook
Author Graham D. Rowles
Publisher Elsevier
Pages 272
Release 2013-09-17
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1483271307

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Aging and Milieu: Environmental Perspectives on Growing Old is a collection of essays that presents insight into the area of aging-environment research. The book focuses primarily on the physical, phenomenological, cultural, social, and clinical environmental context of an old person. Part I explores alternative conceptions of aging and milieu. The second part discusses the old-person-environment transaction. Part III covers the social context of milieu or the notion of how social relationships mediate and condition the symbiotic relationships between the old person and the physical environment. Gerontologists, sociologists, psychologists, architects, and urban planners will find this book interesting.

The Environments of Ageing

The Environments of Ageing
Title The Environments of Ageing PDF eBook
Author Peace, Sheila
Publisher Policy Press
Pages 410
Release 2022-02-24
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1447321626

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Providing the first UK assessment of environmental gerontology, this book enriches current understanding of the spatiality of ageing. Sheila Peace considers how places and spaces contextualise personal experience in varied environments, from urban and rural to general and specialised housing. Situating extensive research within multidisciplinary thinking, and incorporating policy and practice, this book assesses how personal health and wellbeing affect different experiences of environment. It also considers the value of intergenerational and age-related living, the meaning of home and global to local concerns for population ageing. Drawing on international comparisons, this book offers a valuable resource for new research and important lessons for the future.

Environmental Gerontology

Environmental Gerontology
Title Environmental Gerontology PDF eBook
Author Graham D. Rowles, PhD
Publisher Springer Publishing Company
Pages 338
Release 2013
Genre Architecture
ISBN 082610813X

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Aging and the Environment

Aging and the Environment
Title Aging and the Environment PDF eBook
Author Mortimer Powell Lawton
Publisher
Pages 202
Release 1982
Genre Science
ISBN

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The Environment for Aging

The Environment for Aging
Title The Environment for Aging PDF eBook
Author Russell A. Ward
Publisher University of Alabama Press
Pages 272
Release 1988
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0817303421

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The nature and consequences of aging depend on its environmental context, and the literature does not treat the various environmental dimensions in an integrated fashion. The authors introduce a general approach to the human ecosystem, highlighting theoretical and empirical issues necessary to an understanding of person-environment interaction related to aging. They then investigate in detail three aspects of the environment of older persons: residential and neighborhood, interpersonal support networks, and age-related attitudes. They give specific attention to the impact of the age composition of neighborhoods and interpersonal networks. The authors present findings from their interview survey of 1,185 community residents aged 60 and over. Major findings from the interviews include: Despite objective neighborhood problems, older persons express high neighborhood satisfaction. This partly reflects limited residential options, as well as a passive and vicarious spatial experience. The environment is experienced in diverse ways; however, urbanism and personal competence shape the nature and outcomes of person-environment interaction. Older persons have relatively robust interpersonal support networks. Perceived sufficiency of contact and support are more salient to morale than are more objective measures of interpersonal support. Although attitudes toward other older people are generally favorable, patterns of age identity reflect a detrimental view of aging. There is little evidence that socialization for aging or age-group solidarity make aging “easier” in this regard. Older persons exhibit moderate age homogeneity within their interpersonal networks, partly reflecting neighborhood age concentration. Contrary to the apparent benefits of planned age-segregated housing, age homogeneity in neighborhoods and networks does not contribute to well-being. The authors examine three major themes in their concluding chapter; age itself does not “loom large” in the lives of these community residents, though age becomes salient under certain conditions; there is diversity in the implications of the environmental context for aging, in particular reflecting an “environmental docility” hypothesis; and aging must be viewed in interactional or transactional terms—older people “construct” the environment as a subjective entity.