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Health Means

Tag: #HC/HIT‑04

Doing Your Part to Combat Ageism

My last post, Exploring and Overcoming Your Own Biases, reflected upon implicit or unconscious biases, how they are engrained in our brains, and how we can begin to overcome those biases – intentionality, learning about yourself and your biases, and putting yourself in uncomfortable spaces with the goal of learning and growing.  I encourage you to take a few minutes to read that before continuing this post.

On to ageism…

Put simply, ageism refers to assumptions made about people based on how old they are. In my field of work, aging, the term ageism is typically directed at how we discriminate against and treat older people differently than those that are younger. However, ageism can be present no matter one’s age and is also prominent against youth, teens, and “those kids these days.”

Regardless of one’s age, ageism can have significant impacts on one’s physical and psychological health and well-being. In the context of older adults, individuals who internalize ageism – or think that they can’t do certain things or act certain ways because of their age – are shown to have significantly shorter life expectancies, reduced access to health care, and higher rates of depression, to name a few.

More broadly, ageism can have considerable impacts on society, as well. Research shows that 1 in 7 dollars spent on the mostly costly medical conditions in the US can be attributed to negative effects of ageism; that’s approximately $63 billion in health-related costs to older adults. You can read the summary of that study here.

Ageism is a large area of study and there are a myriad of implications that could fill a book. Alas, let’s move on to a few ways we can contribute to combatting ageism.

  • Work toward changing your responses and reflect. Be mindful of your actions toward older adults – even if that’s yourself! Every time you have an interaction with an older adult, step back and reflect on that interaction. Did you treat them differently than you would someone who is younger than them? Did you treat them the way you would want to be treated as an older adult? What could you do to improve any ageist biases that slipped into your interaction?
  • Take a walk in someone else’s shoes. Think about what it would be like to be an older adult who is stereotyped. How would that make you feel and what can you do to make sure you are limiting that in our own behaviors and actions? Practice empathy – it makes a world of difference.
  • Purposefully increase your exposure older adults. When we surround ourselves with people who are different from us, we learn more about others and ourselves. Interact with more older adults, even if it’s just saying hello in the grocery store or going out of your way to have more meaningful conversations with older adults in your life. Perhaps you can even get involved in volunteering in long-term care facilities (when it is safe to do so), serving meals to homebound older adults, or engaging in other service projects such as mowing an older adult’s lawn, fixing their stairs, or shopping for their groceries. There’s so much we can do to increase our exposure to people who aren’t like us and help them out in the process.

These are just three ideas of how we can begin to reflect on ageism and begin to make a difference. Call to action: Give one of these a try.

Health Means…doing your part to combat ageism.

Contributor: Erin Yelland

Turning the Telescope

Hope makes a life worth living. Kathryn Britton conducted an interview she entitled, “Looking in the Right End of the Telescope.” We know how difficult life the past 2 years has been. It is so easy for us to look in the telescope from the wrong direction only to have our world shrink until it becomes unbearable in its smallness. Loss of hope is like that. Without hope our view shrinks until we see only the boulder in the road impeding our journey and very little of the world around us. Not to mention an alternate path around the boulder.

Hope is essential to growth, health, and happiness. An internet search on the impact of hope on wellness reveals multiple studies which demonstrate the health benefits of hope. So how then do we travel from helplessness and hopelessness to hope? Victor Frankl notes in his writings that the human spirit is defiant in its ability to endure hardship and tragedy. This explains why humans can defy the odds and survive and often thrive, even in difficult situations. But what happens when we lose hope? How do we turn the telescope around to see bigness and not a singular focus on our immediate surroundings? Enter into this picture, family, community, church, VFW, friends, school, clubs, self-help books, professional helpers etc., etc., etc.!  Our job is to provide hope. Even the smallest, most seemingly insignificant act can begin the process of turning the telescope around to provide an open, clear view of the world. A smile, a word of encouragement, a letter, a phone call, a cup of coffee, and sometimes a visit with a trained professional can change that view.

Health means…caring enough about the people around us to become knowledgeable about the signs and symptoms of depression and anguish, and then having the courage to have a difficult conversation about hope.

Contributor: Brad Dirks

Kansas State University Research and Extension, and many other organizations, has opportunities for training in recognizing and understanding the struggles that lead to the act of suicide. QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer), Mental Health First Aid, and Farm Stress are Michigan State University Extension programs that are available to help us as we provide hope in difficult times. For more information on these and other available programs, contact: Rebecca McFarland (rmcfarla@ksu.edu), Rachael Clews (rclews@ksu.edu), or Brad Dirks (brdirks@ksu.edu) for more information.