Letter from Tampa: Aging gets a makeover at this gerontology summitthedigitalchaps

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The 76 million Americans in the great baby boom demographic bulge will all be 60 to 79 years old next year. But their powerful influence is not retiring.

Outlines are emerging of how the now-older generation is expected to meet the experience of aging and reshape our culture. Its predecessors are already stretching expectations of elderhood.

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Researchers are aiming to bust stereotypes and shift perceptions about growing older – in the interest of happier, healthier lives free from discrimination.

So what does it mean to be “old”?

That question filled the cavernous Tampa Convention Center with researchers from all over the world last week, with hundreds of scholarly presentations at the annual meeting of the Gerontological Society of America.

The driving angle of the organization these days is reframing perceptions of aging – liberating it from misconceptions and bias. The goal ultimately is to support healthier, happier, longer lives.

The World Health Organization calls ageism the most widespread form of discrimination in the world, saying it is even more implicit and hence unchallenged than sexism or racism.

“We aren’t born ageist. We’re taught,” says Tracey Gendron, chair of the Virginia Commonwealth University’s department of gerontology. “We’re definitely making progress – awareness is on the increase.”

The 76 million Americans in the great baby boom demographic bulge will all be 60 to 79 years old next year. But their powerful influence on the economy, education, culture, politics, and lifestyles is not retiring.

Outlines are emerging of how the now-older generation is expected to meet the experience of aging and reshape our culture. Its immediate predecessors – members of the so-called Greatest Generation (born 1901-1924) and the Silent Generation (born 1925-1945) – are already registering record numbers of centenarians and stretching boomers’ expectations of elderhood.

So what does it mean to be “old”?

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Researchers are aiming to bust stereotypes and shift perceptions about growing older – in the interest of happier, healthier lives free from discrimination.

That question filled the cavernous Tampa Convention Center with researchers from all over the world last week, with room after room of more than 500 scholarly presentations at the annual meeting of the Gerontological Society of America. 

The driving angle of the organization these days is reframing perceptions of aging – liberating it from misconceptions and from discrimination. 

The formal scholarly presentations had new takes on care for the caregivers of elders, the effects of war in early life on aging, the double grip of ageism plus race or gender discrimination, aging education starting in grade school, how hearing aids may avert dementia, third-act careers, hoarding as decision-making avoidance, “driving cessation” (aka taking the car keys away from Dad), robot companions, elder tech literacy, and so on.

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