Gerontology is the study of the social, cultural, psychological, cognitive, and biological aspects of ageing. The word was coined by Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov in 1903, from the Greek γέρων, geron, "old man" and -λογία, -logia, "study of". The field is distinguished from geriatrics,
which is the branch of medicine that specializes in the treatment of
existing disease in older adults. Gerontologists include researchers and
practitioners in the fields of biology, nursing, medicine, criminology,
dentistry, social work, physical and occupational therapy, psychology,
psychiatry, sociology, economics, political science, architecture,
geography, pharmacy, public health, housing, and anthropology.
The multidisciplinary nature of gerontology means that there are a
number of sub-fields which overlap with gerontology. There are policy
issues, for example, involved in government planning and the operation
of nursing homes, investigating the effects of an ageing population
on society, and the design of residential spaces for older people that
facilitate the development of a sense of place or home. Dr. Lawton, a
behavioral psychologist at the Philadelphia Geriatric Center, was among
the first to recognize the need for living spaces designed to
accommodate the elderly, especially those with Alzheimer's disease. As
an academic discipline the field is relatively new. The USC Leonard
Davis School created the first PhD, master's and bachelor's degree
programs in gerontology in 1975.
History
In the medieval Islamic world, several physicians wrote on issues related to Gerontology. Avicenna's The Canon of Medicine (1025) offered instruction for the care of the aged, including diet and remedies for problems including constipation. Arabic physician Ibn Al-Jazzar Al-Qayrawani (Algizar, c. 898–980) wrote on the aches and conditions of the elderly (Ammar 1998, p. 4). His scholarly work covers sleep disorders, forgetfulness, how to strengthen memory, and causes of mortality Ishaq ibn Hunayn (died 910) also wrote works on the treatments for forgetfulness (U.S. National Library of Medicine, 1994).
While the number of aged humans, and the life expectancy,
tended to increase in every century since the 14th, society tended to
consider caring for an elderly relative as a family issue. It was not
until the coming of the Industrial Revolution that ideas shifted in favor of a societal care-system. Some early pioneers, such as Michel Eugène Chevreul, who himself lived to be 102, believed that aging itself should be a science to be studied. Élie Metchnikoff coined the term "gerontology" c. 1903.
Modern pioneers like James Birren
began organizing gerontology as its own field in the 1940s, later being
involved in starting a US government agency on aging – the National Institute on Aging – programs in gerontology at the University of Southern California and University of California, Los Angeles, and as past president of the Gerontological Society of America (founded in 1945).
With the population of people over 60 years old expected to be
some 22% of the world's population by 2050, assessment and treatment
methods for age-related disease burden – the term geroscience emerged in the early 21st century.
Aging demographics
The world is forecast to undergo rapid population aging in the next several decades. In 1900, there were 3.1 million people aged 65 years and older living in the United States.
However, this population continued to grow throughout the 20th century
and reached 31.2, 35, and 40.3 million people in 1990, 2000, and 2010,
respectively. Notably, in the United States and across the world, the "baby boomer"
generation began to turn 65 in 2011. Recently, the population aged 65
years and older has grown at a faster rate than the total population in
the United States. The total population increased by 9.7%, from 281.4
million to 308.7 million, between 2000 and 2010. However, the
population aged 65 years and older increased by 15.1% during the same
period. It has been estimated that 25% of the population in the United States and Canada
will be aged 65 years and older by 2025. Moreover, by 2050, it is
predicted that, for the first time in United States history, the number
of individuals aged 60 years and older will be greater than the number
of children aged 0 to 14 years. Those aged 85 years and older (oldest-old) are projected to increase from 5.3 million to 21 million by 2050.
Adults aged 85–89 years constituted the greatest segment of the
oldest-old in 1990, 2000, and 2010. However, the largest percentage
point increase among the oldest-old occurred in the 90- to 94-year-old
age group, which increased from 25.0% in 1990 to 26.4% in 2010.
With the rapid growth of the aging population, social work
education and training specialized in older adults and practitioners
interested in working with older adults are increasingly in demand.
Gender differences with age
There
has been a considerable disparity between the number of men and women
in the older population in the United States. In both 2000 and 2010,
women outnumbered men in the older population at every single year of
age (e.g., 65 to 100 years and over). The sex ratio,
which is a measure used to indicate the balance of males to females in a
population, is calculated by taking the number of males divided by the
number of females, and multiplying by 100. Therefore, the sex ratio is
the number of males per 100 females. In 2010, there were 90.5 males per
100 females in the 65-year-old population. However, this represented
an increase from 1990 when there were 82.7 males per 100 females, and
from 2000 when the sex ratio was 88.1. Although the gender gap between
men and women has narrowed, women continue to have a greater life
expectancy and lower mortality rates at older ages relative to men. For
example, the Census 2010
reported that there were approximately twice as many women as men
living in the United States at 89 years of age (361,309 versus 176,689,
respectively).
Geographic distribution of older adults in the United States
The
number and percentage of older adults living in the United States vary
across the four different regions (Northeast, Midwest, West, and South)
defined by the United States census. In 2010, the South contained the
greatest number of people aged 65 years and older and 85 years and
older. However, proportionately, the Northeast contains the largest
percentage of adults aged 65 years and older (14.1%), followed by the
Midwest (13.5%), the South (13.0%), and the West (11.9%). Relative to
the Census 2000,
all geographic regions demonstrated positive growth in the population
of adults aged 65 years and older and 85 years and older. The most rapid
growth in the population of adults aged 65 years and older was evident
in the West (23.5%), which showed an increase from 6.9 million in 2000
to 8.5 million in 2010. Likewise, in the population aged 85 years and
older, the West (42.8%) also showed the fastest growth and increased
from 806,000 in 2000 to 1.2 million in 2010. It is worth highlighting
that Rhode Island
was the only state that experienced a reduction in the number of people
aged 65 years and older, and declined from 152,402 in 2000 to 151,881
in 2010. Conversely, all states exhibited an increase in the population
of adults aged 85 years and older from 2000 to 2010.
Biogerontology
Biogerontology is the sub-field of gerontology concerned with the biological aging process,
its evolutionary origins, and potential means to intervene in the
process. It involves interdisciplinary research on biological aging's
causes, effects, and mechanisms. Conservative biogerontologists such as
Leonard Hayflick have predicted that the human life expectancy will peak at about 92 years old, while others such as James Vaupel have predicted that in industrialized countries, life expectancies will reach 100 for children born after the year 2000. and some surveyed biogerontologists have predicted life expectancies of two or more centuries. with Aubrey de Grey offering the "tentative timeframe" that with adequate funding of research to develop interventions in aging such as Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence,
"we have a 50/50 chance of developing technology within about 25 to 30
years from now that will, under reasonable assumptions about the rate of
subsequent improvements in that technology, allow us to stop people
from dying of aging at any age", leading to life expectancies of 1,000
years.
Biomedical gerontology, also known as experimental gerontology and life extension,
is a sub-discipline of biogerontology that endeavors to slow, prevent,
and even reverse aging in both humans and animals. Most "life extensionists"
believe the human life span can be increased within the next century,
if not sooner. Biogerontologists vary in the degree to which they focus
on the study of the aging process as a means of mitigating the diseases of aging
or extending lifespan, although most agree that extension of lifespan
will necessarily flow from reductions in age-related disease and
frailty, although some argue that maximum life span
cannot be altered or that it is undesirable to try. Geroscience is a
recently formulated interdisciplinary field that embraces biomedical
gerontology as the center of preventing diseases of aging through science.
In contrast with biogerontology, which aims to prevent
age-related disease by intervening in aging processes, geriatrics is a
field of medicine that studies the treatment of existing disease in
aging people.
There are numerous theories of aging, and no one theory has been
accepted. There is a wide spectrum of the types of theories for the
causes of aging with programmed theories on one extreme and error
theories on the other. Regardless of the theory, a commonality is that
as humans age, functions of the body decline.
Stochastic theories
Stochastic
theories of aging are theories suggesting that aging is caused by small
changes in the body over time and the body's failure to restore the
system and mend the damages to the body. The cells and tissues are
eventually injured due to the damage gathered over time. This causes the
diminishes in an organ's function related to age. The notion of
accumulated damage was first introduced by Weisman as the "wear and
tear" theory.
Wear and tear theory
Wear
and tear theories of aging suggest that as an individual ages, body
parts such as cells and organs wear out from continued use. Wearing of
the body can be attributable to internal or external causes that
eventually lead to an accumulation of insults
which surpasses the capacity for repair. Due to these internal and
external insults, cells lose their ability to regenerate, which
ultimately leads to mechanical and chemical exhaustion. Some insults
include chemicals in the air, food, or smoke. Other insults may be
things such as viruses, trauma, free radicals, cross-linking, and high
body temperature.
Accumulation
Accumulation
theories of aging suggest that aging is bodily decline that results
from an accumulation of elements, whether introduced to the body from
the environment or resulting from cell metabolism. An example of an accumulation theory is the Free Radical Theory of Aging.
Free radical theory
Free radicals are reactive molecules produced by cellular and environmental processes, and can damage the elements of the cell such as the cell membrane and DNA and cause irreversible damage. The free-radical theory of aging proposes that this damage cumulatively degrades the biological function of cells and impacts the process of aging. The idea that free radicals are toxic agents was first proposed by Rebeca Gerschman and colleagues in 1945, but came to prominence in 1956, when Denham Harman
proposed the free-radical theory of aging and even demonstrated that
free radical reactions contribute to the degradation of biological
systems. Oxidative damage of many types accumulate with age, such as oxidative stress that oxygen-free radicals, because the free radical theory of aging argues that aging results from the damage generated by reactive oxygen species (ROS).
ROS are small, highly reactive, oxygen-containing molecules that can
damage a complex of cellular components such as fat, proteins, or from
DNA; they are naturally generated in small amounts during the body's
metabolic reactions. These conditions become more common as humans grow
older and include diseases related to aging, such as dementia, cancer
and heart disease.
DNA damage theory
DNA
damage has been one of the many causes in diseases related to aging.
The stability of the genome is defined by the cells machinery of repair,
damage tolerance, and checkpoint pathways that counteracts DNA damage.
One hypothesis proposed by Gioacchino Failla in 1958 is that damage accumulation to the DNA causes aging. The hypothesis was developed soon by physicist Leó Szilárd.
This theory has changed over the years as new research has discovered
new types of DNA damage and mutations, and several theories of aging
argue that DNA damage with or without mutations causes aging.
Cross-linking theory
The cross-linking theory proposes that advanced glycation end-products (stable bonds formed by the binding of glucose to proteins) and other aberrant cross-links
accumulating in aging tissues is the cause of aging. The crosslinking
of proteins disables their biological functions. The hardening of the
connective tissue, kidney diseases, and enlargement of the heart are
connected to the cross-linking of proteins. Crosslinking of DNA can induce replication errors, and this leads to deformed cells and increases the risk of cancer.
Genetic
Genetic
theories of aging propose that aging is programmed within each
individual's genes. According to this theory, genes dictate cellular
longevity. Programmed cell death, or apoptosis,
is determined by a "biological clock" via genetic information in the
nucleus of the cell. Genes responsible for apoptosis provide an
explanation for cell death, but are less applicable to death of an
entire organism. An increase in cellular apoptosis may correlate to
aging, but is not a 'cause of death'. Environmental factors and genetic
mutations can influence gene expression and accelerate aging. More
recently epigenetics have been explored as a contributing factor. The epigenetic clock,
which objectively measures the biological age of cells and tissues, may
become useful for testing different biological aging theories.
General imbalance
General imbalance theories of aging suggest that body systems, such as the endocrine, nervous, and immune systems, gradually decline and ultimately fail to function. The rate of failure varies system by system.
Immunological theory
The
immunological theory of aging suggests that the immune system weakens
as an organism ages. This makes the organism unable to fight infections
and less able to destroy old and neoplastic cells.
This leads to aging and will eventually lead to death. This theory of
aging was developed by Ray Walford, an American gerontologist. According
to Walford, incorrect immunological procedures are the cause of the
process of aging.
Social gerontology
Social
gerontology is a multi-disciplinary sub-field that specializes in
studying or working with older adults. Social gerontologists may have
degrees or training in social work, nursing, psychology, sociology, demography, public health, or other social science
disciplines. Social gerontologists are responsible for educating,
researching, and advancing the broader causes of older people.
Because issues of life span and life extension need numbers to quantify them, there is an overlap with demography. Those who study the demography of the human life span differ from those who study the social demographics of aging.
Social theories of aging
Several
theories of aging are developed to observe the aging process of older
adults in society as well as how these processes are interpreted by men
and women as they age.
Activity theory
Activity theory
was developed and elaborated by Cavan, Havighurst, and Albrecht.
According to this theory, older adults' self-concept depends on social
interactions. In order for older adults to maintain morale in old age,
substitutions must be made for lost roles. Examples of lost roles
include retirement from a job or loss of a spouse.
Activity is preferable to inactivity because it facilitates
well-being on multiple levels. Because of improved general health and
prosperity in the older population, remaining active is more feasible
now than when this theory was first proposed by Havighurst nearly six
decades ago. The activity theory is applicable for a stable, post-industrial society,
which offers its older members many opportunities for meaningful
participation.Weakness: Some aging persons cannot maintain a middle-aged
lifestyle, due to functional limitations, lack of income, or lack of a
desire to do so. Many older adults lack the resources to maintain active
roles in society. On the flip side, some elders may insist on
continuing activities in late life that pose a danger to themselves and
others, such as driving at night with low visual acuity or doing
maintenance work to the house while climbing with severely arthritic
knees. In doing so, they are denying their limitations and engaging in
unsafe behaviors.
Disengagement theory
Disengagement theory
was developed by Cumming and Henry. According to this theory, older
adults and society engage in a mutual separation from each other. An
example of mutual separation is retirement from the workforce. A key
assumption of this theory is that older adults lose "ego-energy" and
become increasingly self-absorbed. Additionally, disengagement leads to
higher morale maintenance than if older adults try to maintain social
involvement. This theory is heavily criticized for having an escape
clause - namely, that older adults who remain engaged in society are
unsuccessful adjusters to old age.
Gradual withdrawal from society and relationships preserves
social equilibrium and promotes self-reflection for elders who are freed
from societal roles. It furnishes an orderly means for the transfer of
knowledge, capital, and power from the older generation to the young. It
makes it possible for society to continue functioning after valuable
older members die.
Continuity theory
Continuity theory is an elusive concept. On one hand,
to exhibit continuity can mean to remain the same, to
be uniform, homogeneous, unchanging, even humdrum.
This static view of continuity is not very applicable
to human aging. On the other hand, a dynamic
view of continuity starts with the idea of a basic
structure which persists over time, but it allows for a
variety of changes to occur within the context provided
by the basic structure. The basic structure is
coherent: It has an orderly or logical relation of parts
that is recognizably unique and that allows us to
differentiate that structure from others. With the
introduction of the concept of time, ideas such as
direction, sequence, character development, and
story line enter into the concept of continuity as it is
applied to the evolution of a human being. In this
theory, a dynamic concept of continuity is developed
and applied to the issue of adaptation to normal
aging.
A central premise of continuity theory is that, in
making adaptive choices, middle-aged and older
adults attempt to preserve and maintain existing internal
and external structures and that they prefer to
accomplish this objective by using continuity (i.e.,
applying familiar strategies in familiar arenas of life).
In middle and later life, adults are drawn by the
weight of past experience to use continuity as a
primary adaptive strategy for dealing with changes
associated with normal aging. To the extent that
change builds upon, and has links to, the person's
past, change is a part of continuity. As a result of both
their own perceptions and pressures from the social
environment, individuals who are adapting to normal
aging are both predisposed and motivated
toward inner psychological continuity as well as outward
continuity of social behavior and circumstances.
Continuity theory views both internal and
external continuity as robust adaptive strategies that
are supported by both individual preference and
social sanctions. Continuity theory consists of general
adaptive principles that people who are normally
aging could be expected to follow, explanations of
how these principles work, and a specification of
general areas of life in which these principles could
be expected to apply. Accordingly, continuity theory
has enormous potential as a general theory of
adaptation to individual aging.
Age stratification theory
According to this theory, older adults born during different time periods form cohorts
that define "age strata". There are two differences among strata:
chronological age and historical experience. This theory makes two
arguments. 1. Age is a mechanism for regulating behavior and as a result
determines access to positions of power. 2. Birth cohorts play an
influential role in the process of social change.
Life course theory
According to this theory, which stems from the life course perspective (Bengston and Allen, 1993),
aging occurs from birth to death. Aging involves social, psychological,
and biological processes. Additionally, aging experiences are shaped by
cohort and period effects.
Also reflecting the life course focus,
consider the implications for how societies might function when age-based
norms vanish—a consequence of the deinstitutionalization of the life course—
and suggest that these implications pose new challenges for theorizing aging
and the life course in postindustrial societies. Dramatic reductions in mortality,
morbidity, and fertility over the past several decades have so shaken up the
organization of the life course and the nature of educational, work, family, and
leisure experiences that it is now possible for individuals to become old in new
ways. The configurations and content of other life stages are being altered as
well, especially for women. In consequence, theories of age and aging will need
to be reconceptualized.
Cumulative advantage/disadvantage theory
According
to this theory, which was developed beginning in the 1960s by Derek
Price and Robert Merton and elaborated on by several researchers such as
Dale Dannefer,
inequalities have a tendency to become more pronounced throughout the
aging process. A paradigm of this theory can be expressed in the adage "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer".
Advantages and disadvantages in early life stages have a profound
effect throughout the life span. However, advantages and disadvantages
in middle adulthood have a direct influence on economic and health
status in later life.
Environmental gerontology
Environmental
gerontology is a specialization within gerontology that seeks an
understanding and interventions to optimize the relationship between
aging persons and their physical and social environments.
The field emerged in the 1930s during the first studies on
behavioral and social gerontology. In the 1970s and 1980s, research
confirmed the importance of the physical and social environment in
understanding the aging population and improved the quality of life in
old age.
Studies of environmental gerontology indicate that older people prefer
to age in their immediate environment, whereas spatial experience and
place attachment are important for understanding the process.
Some research indicates that the physical-social environment is related to the longevity and quality of life of the elderly. Precisely, the natural environment (such as natural therapeutic landscapes, therapeutic garden) contributes to active and healthy aging in the place.
Jurisprudential gerontology
Jurisprudential
gerontology (sometimes referred to as "geriatric jurisprudence") is a
specialization within gerontology that looks into the ways laws and
legal structures interact with the aging experience. The field started
from legal scholars in the field of elder law,
which found that looking into legal issues of older persons without a
broader inter-disciplinary perspective does not provide the ideal legal
outcome. Using theories such as therapeutic jurisprudence, jurisprudential scholars critically examined existing legal institutions (e.g. adult guardianship, end of life care, or nursing homes regulations) and showed how law should look more closely to the social and psychological aspects of its real-life operation.
Other streams within jurisprudential gerontology also encouraged
physicians and lawyers to try to improve their cooperation and better
understand how laws and regulatory institutions affect health and well
being of older persons.