Seniors & aging news, issues and health articles

Friday 10 October, 2008
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Seniors & aging news, issues and health articles

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10/10/2008 07:00 AM
  • Predicting Conventional Old Age For '60s Generation
  • Britain's post-war baby boomers, associated throughout their lives with social change, are failing to break new ground in their approach to growing old. Academic research supported by the Economic and Social Research Council and Arts and Humanities Research Council shows that most members of the baby boom generation - often regarded as the first teenagers of a more affluent consumer society - have modest ideas for their retirement.
    10/10/2008 07:00 AM
  • Reduced Pre-Registration Rates For The IOF World Congress On Osteoporosis
  • Convenient online registration to the IOF World Congress on Osteoporosis 2008, at greatly discounted rates, is available only until October 31, 2008. To benefit from lower rates and easy registration, please visit http://www.iofbonehealth.org/wco/2008/homepage.html. Special registration fees are available for participants from non-OECD countries and for IOF members.
    10/10/2008 07:00 AM
  • Seniors Feel Health Care Will Improve Under Obama
  • DSS Research, the largest research and analytics firm dedicated to the market information needs of health insurance organizations, released today the latest wave of its quarterly, national SeniorTrax® Survey of the 65 and over population. The most recent survey data completed in early September with 580 seniors 65 and over concludes that most seniors feel health care in the US is more likely to improve under the leadership of Democratic Presidential Candidate Barack Obama.
    10/10/2008 03:00 AM
  • Geriatricians Must Refine Their Focus On Frailest Elderly With Primary Care Physicians Caring For Healthier Elders Article Series Published In JAGS
  • Two converging trends - rapid growth in the population of older Americans and declining numbers of geriatricians practicing in the U.S. - are forcing the field of geriatrics to refine its scope, according to a series of articles on the future of the field in October's Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS). Over the next two decades, the number of older Americans will nearly double, to 70 million.
    10/10/2008 03:00 AM
  • People Shouldn't Have To Jump Through Hoops To Complain About Care, Says Help The Aged, UK
  • Reacting to a National Audit Office report, Feeding Back? Learning from complaints handling in Health and Social Care, which shows the complaints system for health and social care services is in need of improvement, Lizzie McLennan, Senior Social Care Policy Officer for Help the Aged, says: "Today's report shows that worryingly, complaining about health and social care services can be a difficult and complex experience.
    10/10/2008 02:00 AM
  • New Gene Associated With Age-Related Macular Degeneration
  • Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) has been associated with a new gene, according to an article released on October 7, 2008 in The Lancet. Macular degeneration is characterized by visual impairment due to damage to the retina. In developed countries, AMD is the most common type of vision loss.
    10/09/2008 11:00 AM
  • Studies Look At Use Of Alternative Medicines Among Elderly Blacks, Prostate Screening Predictors Among Older Immigrant Men
  • "Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use Among Older Urban African- Americans: Individual and Neighborhood Associations" (.pdf), Journal of the National Medical Association: The study, led by researchers from the University of Maryland
    10/09/2008 08:00 AM
  • Barriers To Angioplasty For Life-Threatening Heart Attacks In Florida: Women, The Elderly And Weekend Admissions Less Likely To Get The Treatment
  • Women, the elderly, and patients admitted to the emergency department on weekends are all less likely to receive same-day coronary angioplasty for a life-threatening heart attack in Florida, University of South Florida researchers found. Their study was published this month (Oct. 1) in the American Journal of Cardiology.
    10/09/2008 07:00 AM
  • Cashflow Dilemma For Older People Forced To Sell Their Homes To Pay For Care, UK
  • NHFA Care Advice notify us that they are taking calls from families of older people unable to meet their care costs - caused by both delays in the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG) processing applications to register Lasting Powers of Attorney (LPA) or appoint deputies; and the disastrous slump in house sales. Indeed, figures from The Ministry of Justice show that in the six months to end of March, only 1,256 applications out of a total of 9,623 were registered.
    10/09/2008 03:00 AM
  • HHS' Administration On Aging Provides Disaster Assistance To Texas Seniors
  • HHS Assistant Secretary for Aging Josefina G. Carbonell announced that Texas has received $65,000 to assist in relief efforts as a result of devastation created by Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, which struck the Texas coast and surrounding communities late this summer.
    10/08/2008 12:00 PM
  • Genetic Finding Implicates Innate Immune System In Major Cause Of Blindness
  • Scientists have identified one of the genes implicated in age-related macular degeneration, the most common cause of blindness in developed countries. The research, published online in the Lancet, adds to the growing understanding of the genetics of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which the researchers believe should ultimately lead to novel treatments for the disease.
    10/08/2008 11:00 AM
  • Adults Should Exercise Aerobically For At Least 2.5 Hours A Week Says US Government
  • The US government's Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has announced its first ever guidelines for physical activity for Americans that say adults should have 2.5 hours of moderate physical aerobic exercise a week, and children should have an hour or more of physical activity a day. The new HHS publication is titled "2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans"; it covers all ages, and it can be downloaded from the HHS website.
    10/08/2008 09:00 AM
  • Identification Of Gene Variant That Causes Sinus Node Disease
  • University of Iowa researchers and colleagues in France have identified a gene variant that causes a potentially fatal human heart rhythm disorder called sinus node disease. Also known as "sick sinus syndrome," the disease affects approximately one in 600 heart patients older than 65 and is responsible for 50 percent or more of the permanent pacemaker placements in the United States.
    10/08/2008 07:00 AM
  • Sorafenib Treatment Appears To Benefit Older Renal Cancer Patients
  • Older and younger patients with renal cancer derive similar benefit from sorafenib therapy and tolerate the drug equally well, according to a study published online October 7 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Although the risk of being diagnosed with cancer increases with age, relatively few older patients participate in clinical trials.
    10/07/2008 11:00 AM
  • 2008 SNM Wagner-Torizuka Fellowships Announced
  • Four Japanese researchers were awarded the 2008 SNM Wagner-Torizuka Fellowship and are currently studying in the United States through 2010 as part of the two-year program.
    10/07/2008 11:00 AM
  • New Look At The Causal Relationship Between Antibiotic Use And C. Difficile Infections
  • The latest study by Dr. Sandra Dial from the Research Institute of the MUHC, McGill University, and Attending Staff in the Intensive Care Unit at the Jewish General Hospital, questions the assumption held by a vast majority of medical professionals that Clostridium difficile (C.difficile) infections are essentially always preceded by antibiotic use. This finding could have a major impact on how patients with diarrhea are evaluated upon their admission to the hospital.
    10/07/2008 11:00 AM
  • In Mouse Model Of Premature Aging Disorder Anti-cancer Drug Prevents, Reverses Cardiovascular Damage
  • ­ An experimental anti-cancer drug can prevent -- and even reverse -- potentially fatal cardiovascular damage in a mouse model of progeria, a rare genetic disorder that causes the most dramatic form of human premature aging, National Institutes of Health (NIH) researchers reported today. In a study published in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team led by Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.
    10/07/2008 09:00 AM
  • Millions In Federal Health-Care Dollars Could Be Saved By CRC Screening Before Medicare Eligibility Age
  • A screening program for colon cancer in patients starting ten years prior to Medicare eligibility, at age 55 instead of Medicare's 65, would save at least two dollars for every dollar spent, according to a new study presented at the American College of Gastroenterology's 73rd Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando. As people get older, their risk of developing polyps and colorectal cancer increases.
    10/07/2008 09:00 AM
  • Unmet Need Common Among Patients With Advanced Illness
  • There is often a lack of adequate communication between health care providers and those facing terminal conditions, according to a series of articles in the latest issue of The Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences (Vol. 63, No. 3). This topic is of concern to older adults, because they comprise the vast majority - about 70 percent - of those contending with multiple chronic medical problems.
    10/06/2008 07:00 AM
  • Breast Cancer Remains Threat For Older Women
  • Despite recent examples of young and middle-aged celebrities being diagnosed with breast cancer, more than half of breast cancers happen in women over age 65. That's why experts at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center recommend women continue to receive yearly breast screenings through their 70s. "Women don't seem to take the risk of breast cancer as they get older seriously.
    10/05/2008 02:00 AM
  • MPS Urges Doctors To Remain Vigilant For Signs Of Elder Abuse
  • With the elderly community set to be celebrated on International Day of Older Persons (1 October), a leading professional indemnity provider is urging its members to remain alert to potential indicators that senior citizens have been abused. The Medical Protection Society (MPS) says it is issuing the advice partly because there is a greater tendency in the media, and society generally, to focus on abuse of children, rather than that of older people, which often remains invisible.
    10/03/2008 03:00 AM
  • Brain Health Will Be The Focus Of Staying Sharp
  • STAYING SHARP IN CONCORD: LEADING BRAIN EXPERTS DISCUSS SUCCESSFUL AGING WHAT: Brain function and health will be the focus of the Staying Sharp session on October 4 at the Embassy Suites Hotel Resort and Conference Center in Concord, NC.
    10/02/2008 08:00 AM
  • Doctors Throughout Ireland Call For Better Standards Of Care For Older People
  • Doctors representing the medical profession across the island of Ireland are calling on their governments, north and south, to lead the way in radically improving standards of care for older people.
    10/02/2008 06:00 AM
  • Sirtris' Review Of Sirtuin Therapeutics For Diseases Of Aging In Nature Reviews Drug Discovery
  • Sirtris, a GSK company focused on discovering and developing small molecule drugs to treat diseases of aging such as Type 2 Diabetes, announced today that it published a new review article on the growing body of sirtuin research and its potential to treat diseases of aging such as Type 2 Diabetes, mitochondrial disorders, inflammation, cancer, and heart disease.
    10/02/2008 06:00 AM
  • Researchers To Study Depression And Disability In Age-Related Macular Degeneration Patients
  • Researchers at the Farber Institute for Neurosciences at Thomas Jefferson University and the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University were recently awarded a $3.7 million grant from The National Eye Institute to study depression in patients diagnosed with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Barry W. Rovner, M.D.

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