Chapter 23 Flashcards

Late Adulthood- Biosocial Development

1
Q

A prejudice in which people are categorized and judged solely on the basis of their chronological age. Considers people as part of a category and not as individuals, can target people of any age.

A

Ageism

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2
Q

A condescending way of speaking to older adults that resembles baby talk, with short, simple sentences, exaggerated emphasis, repetition, and a slower rate and higher pitch than normal speech.

A

Elderspeak

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3
Q

_________threat can be as debilitating for the aged as for other groups.

A

Stereotype

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4
Q

The multidisciplinary study of old age.

A

Gerontology

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5
Q

The medical specialty devoted to aging

A

Geriatrics

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6
Q

A shift in the proportions of the population of various ages. Once there were 20 times more children than older people

A

Demographic shift

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7
Q

People who’ve lived 100 years or more. The fastest-growing age group

A

Centenarians

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8
Q

A graphic representation of population as a series of stacked bars in which each age cohort is represented by one bar, with the youngest cohort at the bottom

A

Demographic pyramid

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9
Q

Healthy, vigorous, financially secure older adults (those aged 60 to 75) who are well integrated into the lives of their families and communities.
%?

A

Young-old (70%)

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10
Q

Older adults (those aged 75 to 85) who suffer from physical, mental, or social deficits. %..?

A

Old-old (20%)

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11
Q

Elderly adults (those over age 85) who are dependent on others for almost everything, requiring supportive services such as nursing-home care and hospital stays.%…?

A

Oldest-old (10%)

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12
Q

The universal and irreversible physical changes that occur to all living creatures as they grow older.

A

Primary aging

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13
Q

The specific physical illnesses or conditions that become more common with aging but result from poor health habits, genetic vulnerability, and other influences that vary from person to person.

A

Secondary aging

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14
Q

Disease that involves the heart and the circulatory system

A

Cardiovascular disease

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15
Q

Older adults spend more time in bed, take longer to fall asleep, wake up more often, and feel drowsy in the daytime more often.

A

Individual Compensation: Sleep

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16
Q

Older adults drive more slowly, may not drive at night or when there is bad weather and may give up driving altogether.

A

Social Compensation: Driving

17
Q

A shortening of the time a person spends ill or infirm before death; accomplished by postponing illness.

A

Compression of Morbidity

18
Q

With age, bones become more porous, losing calcium and strength. This can lead to ______________ where bones can be broken easily.

A

osteoporosis

19
Q

Most common liability elders experience from falling is fear so they reduced their _______ which caused them to become sicker.

A

activity

20
Q

Only _____%of people over age 65 see well without glasses.
Taste, smell, touch, and hearing are also impaired (e.g., by age __, the average man is almost deaf, as are about half of the women).

A

10% ; 90

21
Q

3 most vision impairments in the elderly

A

Cateracts - age 50 10%
Glaucoma 1% in 70s
Macular degeneration

22
Q

A process by which the human body wears out due to the passage of time and exposure to stressors.

A

Wear and Tear

23
Q

A mechanism in the DNA of cells that regulates the aging process by triggering hormonal changes and controlling cellular reproduction and repair.

A

Genetic clock

24
Q

The oldest possible age to which members of a species can live, under ideal circumstances. For humans, that age is approximately 122 years

A

Maximum life span

25
Q
  • The number of years that the average person in a particular population is likely to live.
  • *In the U.S. today, average life expectancy at birth is about 75 years for men and 81 years for women.
  • *Dramatic variations from nation to nation
A

Average life expectancy

26
Q

Atoms of oxygen that have an unpaired electron and which can, over time, cause cancer, diabetes, and arteriosclerosis

A

Oxygen free radicals

27
Q

Chemical compounds that nullify the effects of oxygen free radicals by forming a bond with their unattached oxygen electron.

A

Antioxidants

28
Q

Immune cells made in the bone marrow that create antibodies for isolating and destroying bacteria and viruses.

A

B Cells

29
Q

Immune cells made in the thymus gland that produce substances that attack infected cells in the body

A

T Cells

30
Q

The number of times a human cell is capable of dividing into two new cells

A

Hayflick limit

31
Q

The ends of chromosomes in the cells

A

Telomeres

32
Q

Enzyme that increases the length of telomeres

A

Telomerase

33
Q

Slows down aging

A

Calorie restriction