| Special
Issue: Health Promotion Among the Elderly |
Lester Breslow
David Reuben
Steven Wallace |
Introduction: Health Promotion Among the
Elderly
|
Intervention Focus |
|
Medical Self Care |
Nallini Gnanadesigan
Susan H. Hirsch
David B. Reuben |
Preventive Health Behaviors and
Mammography Use Among Urban Older Women
A cross-sectional survey of 610 low income women between the ages of
60 and 84 who attended community meal sites in Los Angeles was conducted
to determine health behaviors associated with mammography use among
urban community dwellers. Preventive practices that require women to
take an active role and recurrent participation were positively
associated with a current mammography, while services that are
clinician-initiated were associated with ever having a mammography. |
|
Nutrition |
Kathleen M. Hall
Russell V. Luepker |
Is Hypercholesterolemia a Risk Factor and
Should It Be Treated in the Elderly?
A MEDLINE search and bibliography review on treatment of
hypercholesterolemia on older adults yielded 1360 abstracts. After all
subject inclusion criteria were applied, 40 remained. After methodology
inclusion criteria were applied, five long term randomized trials of
lipid-lowering therapy for older adults remained. The subjects who
received lipid-lowering therapy had reductions in CHD deaths ranging
from 26% to 43%, all cause mortality of 34%, coronary events 15% to 32%,
and stroke 26% to 40%. The authors conclude that lipid screening and
treatment is warranted for older adults. |
|
Smoking Control |
| David M. Burns |
Cigarette Smoking Among the Elderly:
Disease Consequences and the Benefits of Cessation
Older smokers are less likely to attempt to quit smoking than
younger smokers, but when they do try to quit, they are more likely to
use formal assistance and to be successful in quitting. The excess death
rate for smokers vs non-smokers increases with age for lung cancer,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart disease, and other
smoking-related causes of death. Of the three diseases, the excess death
rate is highest for heart disease before age 50 but is overtaken by lung
cancer by age 55; the impact on chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases
becomes most evident by age 65. Death rates from all causes drop by the
first year after quitting after controlling for disease status at the
time of quitting. |
|
Social Health |
| Teresa E. Seeman |
Health Promoting Effects of Friends and
Family on Health Outcomes in Older Adults
This non-systematic review of the literature concluded that there is
strong support for the claim that higher levels of social integration
among older adults is associated with lower mortality rates. Less
extensive evidence suggests that higher levels of social integration
provide protective effects against physical and mental illnesses and
facilitate recovery from disease. A small but growing literature
suggests potential negative effects from relationships characterized by
conflicts and excessive demands, especially in stimulating angina and
depression. |
Applications |
|
Underserved Populations |
Meredith Minkler
Helen Schauffler
Kristen Clements-Nolle |
Health Promotion for Older Americans in
the 21st Century
A review of the literature was conducted on the behavioral and
environmental contributors and barriers to health promotion for
Americans over 65. Creative health promotion interventions sensitive to
the needs of older adults were described to develop a recommended health
promotion strategy for this group. Health promotion programs have the
potential to improve the current health and quality of life of older
adults. Programs that promote individual risk reduction as well as
targeting the broader social or physical environment are likely to have
the greatest impact. |
Thomas R. Prohaska
Karen Peters
Jan S. Warren |
Sources of Attrition in a Church-based
Exercise Program for Older African-Americans
Among 123 older African Americans recruited into a church-based
exercise program, 43% had dropped out within four months. Compared to
those who did not drop out, drop outs had lower levels of education,
energy to do activities, energy to exercise, and self-ratings of health,
all based on measures taken before the class. Over half of those who
dropped out cited non-exercise related health problems, and 17%
caregiver responsibilities. Of those who dropped out, half said they
would continue to exercise and 32% said they intended to start within
the next six months. |
|
|
| Abstracts |
31
abstracts are featured from a variety of publications. |
| DataBase:
Research and Evaluation Results |
Four new
studies are critiqued and are added to the DataBase chart. |