Aging in the 21st Century: Longer Lives Can
Still Lead to Happier Golden Years
Newswise — As more
people live well into their 80s and 90s, it’s reassuring to know that most
people get happier as they age and exert more emotional control than younger
adults, according to researchers who spoke at the 117th Annual Convention of
the American Psychological Association.
“Life expectancy
changed because people changed the way they lived,” said Laura Carstensen,
PhD. “Now that we’re here, we have to keep adapting. We are in the middle of
a second revolution and it’s up to us to make adulthood itself longer and
healthier.”
Carstensen, a
psychology professor at Stanford University and founding director of the
Stanford Center on Longevity, said the percentage of people on the planet
who are over 65 is expected to more than double by the year 2050, and the
fastest-growing segment of the population is people over age 85.
Susan Turk Charles,
PhD, of the University of California, Irvine, presented a review of several
psychological studies on aging and mental health. She found that except for
people with dementia-related diseases, mental health generally improves with
age. One study she cited – a 23-year longitudinal study looking at three
groups of people, each at different stages in their lives – found that
emotional happiness improved with age.
Research has also
shown that older adults exert greater emotional control than younger adults,
meaning older adults are more likely to actively avoid or limit negative,
stressful situations than do younger adults, Charles said. She presented
results from one study in which younger and older adults reported their
thoughts and emotions after hearing personal criticism by two other people.
Younger adults focused more on the negative comments and demanded more
information about the origin of the criticism. Older adults were less likely
to dwell on the negative comments and their responses were less negative
overall compared to those of the younger adults.
“Based on work by
Carstensen and her colleagues, we know that older people are increasingly
aware that the time they have left in life is growing shorter,” said
Charles. “They want to make the best of it so they avoid engaging in
situations that will make them unhappy. They have also had more time to
learn and understand the intentions of others which help them to avoid these
stressful situations.”
However, Charles also
said that these age-related benefits for older adults may not appear when
older adults are faced with prolonged, distressful situations with no way to
escape. “Older adults may have more difficulty with these situations because
distressing events require both psychological and physical resources,” she
said. “We know that older adults who are dealing with chronic stressors,
such as caregiving, report high rates of physical symptoms and emotional
distress.”
In separate
addresses, Carstensen and Charles both acknowledged the importance of social
relationships on longevity. Scientists have been uncovering evidence that
the quality of people’s relationships can influence the way their brains
process information and how they respond physiologically to stress.
“These changes have a
profound impact on health outcomes,” Carstensen said. She cited a recent
study of more than 1,000 Swedes in which those who had a strong social
network were 60 percent less likely to have symptoms of cognitive impairment
than those who did not. None of the participants showed signs of dementia
before the study. The researchers assessed participants’ social situations,
including whether they were married or single, lived alone, and enjoyed
their social circle.
And while older
people’s minds may appear to be slowing down to those around them, Meredyth
Daneman, PhD, of the University of Toronto at Mississauga, said that may not
always be the case. In a series of studies comparing young adults to older
adults during various cognitive and hearing tests, she found age-related
declines in the ability to understand spoken language are often the result
of a decline in hearing, rather than a decline in brain function.
Healthy aging,
though, isn’t just about looking at the very old. It’s also about looking at
the very young, Carstensen said. She pointed to a growing and compelling
body of research that suggests even relatively small increases in education
pay off in the quality and length of life. “Independent studies agree that
even one additional year of education very likely increases life expectancy
by more than a year,” she said.
Carstensen had
several suggestions for people who want to prepare for old age now:
•Envision ways to thoroughly enjoy the years that lie ahead and imagine what
it would be like to live a healthy, happy 100 years.
•Design your social and physical environments – home, spending habits,
eating habits – so that your daily routine reinforces your goals.
•Diversify your expertise and activities and avoid putting your social
investments
The American
Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific
and professional organization representing psychology in the United States
and is the world’s largest association of psychologists. APA’s membership
includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants
and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and
affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial
associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession
and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.