Transcript Document
Human Behavior in the
Social Environment: A
Multidimensional Perspective
Unit 9
LATE ADULTHOOD
Chapter 12
Late Adulthood
No
quiz this week.
Let’s
take a quick look at the
directions for your final project.
Final Project
Due at the end of Unit 9.
Project Objective: Illustrate your knowledge
of the course material.
Summarize and evaluate the influences of
the environment on Luis’s behavior.
Please review the rubric.
Late Adulthood
Developmental Themes
Late Adulthood (65-death)
Erikson’s theory: INTEGRITY versus DESPAIR
Integrity is defined as the ability to integrate or
satisfactorily blend one’s history and experience with the
task of evaluating & accepting one’s life.
The oldest old (85+) & minority elders are the fastest
growing ages
Leaving a legacy is an important goal for many in later life
Late Adulthood
Developmental Themes
General Characteristics of older adults by subperiod
Young-old (65-74) - The young-old typically remain active in the
community & maintain strong ties with families & friends
Middle-old (75-84) - More in this age group experience chronic
disease (arthritis, cardiovascular, respiratory, circulatory)
Old-old (85+) - A predominant number of this group is dependent,
frail & experiencing more disabilities & chronic illnesses
Source: Based on Hartford (1985).
Late Adulthood
Theories of Aging
Continuity theory: emphasizes that people change less with aging
than they stay the same. Adaptation to changes that occur with age
is done using familiar strategies from the person’s past
Activity theory: applies social role theory to late life. Older people
experience greater subjective well-being when they continue to be
active in many roles.
Disengagement theory: disengagement occurs in late adulthood
through the process of mutual withdrawal of the person and of
society.
Socioemotional selectivity: as people age, familiar and reliable
relationships become more important. People regulate emotions
and conserve energy by selecting with whom to invest their
emotional energies.
Which of the theories relates to Carmen Perez?
Source: Based on Hartford (1985).
Late Adulthood
Biological Dimension
Biophysical growth and development
Health care and medications
Sexuality
Implications for practice: sexuality in late adulthood
Biophysical strengths and hazards
Chronic health problems
Death and dying
Advance directives for health care
Implications for practice: End-of-life care
Late Adulthood
Psychological Dimension
Cognitive Development & Information
Processing
Selective Optimism & CompensationFocuses on ways the older self is able to cope &
maintain integrity despite declines in reserve
capacities
Late Adulthood
Cognitive Development &
Information Processing
Fluid Intelligence -Abstract reasoning ability or
“native intelligence”
• Does this increase or decreases with age?
Cystallized Intelligence - Accumulated
information & verbal skills
• Does this increase, decrease or remain stable with
age?
Late Adulthood
Common Myths Associated with
Mental Impairment
Possibly Alzheimer’s or Dementia
NORMAL
Temporarily forgetting a
colleague’s name
Not being able to recall the name later
Having a word on the tip of the
tongue
Substituting strange words for forgotten
words
Misplacing objects in moments
of distraction
Misplacing things in unusual places &
having no memory of putting them there
Forgetting for a moment where Getting lost on your own street
you’re going
Having trouble balancing the
checkbook accurately
Forgetting how to add or subtract
numbers
Temporarily forgetting the day
of the week
Not knowing what season or year it is,
even after thinking about them
Late Adulthood
Attitudes & Emotions:
Loss, Grief & Mourning
Factors
that may affect experience, behavior &
adaptation in loss
ENVIRONMENTAL OR EXTRINSIC FACTORS
•
•
•
•
•
Personal losses or gain
Social forces
Socioeconomic adversities
Unwanted retirement
Cultural devaluation of older persons
Late Adulthood
Attitudes & Emotions:
Loss, Grief & Mourning
Factors
that may affect experience, behavior &
adaptation in loss
INTRINSIC FACTORS
•
•
•
•
Nature of personality
Physical diseases
Age-specific changes
Experience of bodily dissolution and approaching death
Late Adulthood
Loss, Grief & Mourning
Four Tasks Essential to Mourning A Loss:
1. ACCEPT THE LOSS: Initially people deny the reality of death,
so the first task is to accept that the loved one is gone & will
not return
• Often people display searching behaviors (seeing the loved
one in a crowd or hearing their voice)
2. FEEL THE PAIN: Many ask after the death of loved one
“When does the pain go away?” But pain cannot be avoided &
if not dealt with at the time of death, it may resurface later
• Bereaved individuals need to externalize the pain by talking
about the death & the loved one
• Group therapy can be helpful to facilitate this
Late Adulthood
Source: Worden, (2002).
Loss, Grief & Mourning
3. ADJUST TO THE NEW ENVIRONMENT:
External adjustments include dealing with practical realities
& loss of social roles
Internal adjustments may relate to the person’s identity as
a child or a partner of the person who is deceased
Spiritual adjustments, coming to some understanding of
the meaning of the person’s life & the loss, need to be
made.
4. FIND A WAY TO MAINTAIN CONNECTION WITH THE
DECEASED
Late Adulthood
Source: Worden, (2002).
Social Dimension
Families & Groups
Parent-Child Relationships
Communities & Support Systems
The Continuum of Care
Social Strengths & Hazards
Elder Abuse & Neglect
Late Adulthood
Parent-Child Relationships
Increased health & longevity have complicated parentchild relationships, & there is considerable ambivalence
about giving/receiving help & the changing roles
Caregiving is a broad term that may describe:
•
•
•
•
Hands-on assistance with activities of daily living
Helping to hire & manage professional caregivers
Making decisions about care for a parent who needs help
Overseeing the care a parent receives in a nursing home
Contributors to Resilience in
Family Caregivers
Distancing from the care situation, physically &
emotionally
Regular physical exercise
Keeping up personal hobbies
Having at least one close confidant for emotional
support
Personal religious beliefs
A philosophy of duty toward the parent
Sense of humor
Source: Adapted from Ross, Holliman & Dixon (2003).
Late Adulthood
Communities & Support Systems:
The Continuum of Care
Long-term
care- Medical & social interventions for
those who have chronic illnesses or impairments that are
geared toward helping a patient live as satisfactorily as
possible in an appropriate, least restrictive setting
Senior living options:
Independent living senior apartments
Low-income-housing tax credit properties
Board & care homes or adult foster homes
Freestanding assisted-living facilities
Continuing care retirement communities
Nursing homes
Late Adulthood
Elder Abuse & Neglect
Elder abuse includes any mistreatment of older
adults, whether it is abuse or neglect, intentional or
unintentional
Physical Abuse, including Sexual Abuse
Emotional Abuse
Financial Exploitation
Self-Neglect occurs when an independent older
person is incapable of necessary self-care resulting
in being malnourished, dehydrated, dirty, ill or living
in a cluttered, unsafe environment
Self-Neglect usually relates to dementia or psychiatric
illness of an elder who lacks involved family nearby
Late Adulthood
Risk Factors & Signs of
Elder Abuse & Neglect
Presence of family member’s mental illness, or
drug or alcohol abuse
Stressful life events for the family, such as
financial loss, death, divorce
Cognitive impairment of the older person (more
likely to be neglected)
Physical impairment/dependence on others for
physical needs (more likely to be abused
Late Adulthood
Risk Factors & Signs of
Elder Abuse & Neglect
Older person’s social isolation
Poor hygiene & nutritional status; obvious lack
of care
The older person appears hypervigilant or
nervous
The caregiver displays hostility & impatience
toward the elder
Late Adulthood
Causes of Elder Abuse & Neglect
Caregiver Stress- Refers to situations in which the caregiver becomes
overwhelmed by the demands of the dependent elder
Caregiver may perpetrate abuse in a moment of anger/stress or may
neglect the person’s needs
Caregiver stress only accounts for a very small amount of abuse cases
Wolf (2000) cites multiple risk factors that cause elder abuse, including
the earlier relationship of the victim & abuser, the abuser’s mental state
& the lack of appropriate alternative services or caregivers
Caregiver Impairment- Refers to a caregiver’s mental illness, personality
disorder, or substance abuse & may involve more serious acts that are
perpetrated repeatedly
Ecological Model of Elder Abuse
Views elder abuse as multidimensional & linked to other social
problems
Late Adulthood
Developmental Considerations for
Assessment in Late Adulthood
ROUTINE OBSERVATIONS
• Examples: Chronic health conditions;
functioning in activities of daily living;
medications used & their side effects;
Opportunities to exercise; Mental status:
memory, judgment ; social and community
opportunities ; family support or conflicts
Late Adulthood
Developmental Considerations for
Assessment in Late Adulthood
STRENGTHS & LANDMARKS OF
DEVELOPMENT
•
Examples: Maintaining interests & activities to
capability; interest in remaining as independent as
possible; interest in sexual expression &
companionship; desire to leave a legacy; desire to
maintain family & friendship connections; may take
comfort in religious beliefs or spirituality
Late Adulthood
Developmental Considerations for
Assessment in Late Adulthood
DEVELOPMENTAL ISSUES
(NOT PROBLEMS)
EXAMPLES: Physical vulnerability due to senescence of
bodily systems; cognitive processing speed decreases;
short-term storage & recall memory decreases;
strengthening of religious beliefs (sometimes); selective
about appropriate activities & interests; may need to give
up drive; may need supportive end of life care
Late Adulthood
Developmental Considerations for
Assessment in Late Adulthood
DEVELOPMENTAL OBSERVATIONS
REQUIRING ATTENTION
EXAMPLES: Little affect; lack of interest or
enjoyment; talks of being worthless or being a
burden; social isolation; slurred speech or
otherwise not alert; walking unsteadily but without
cane or walker; possible alcohol misuse; repeats
same questions, gets lost, obvious memory loss;
signs of physical neglect- dirty, unkempt, bedsores;
signs of nutritional deficiency- too thin, little food in
the house, etc.
Late Adulthood
Your final project is due at the end of Unit 9.
For Unit 10, please read the article titled, From
Tragedy to Triumph: Counselor as Companion on
the Hero’s Journey. I encourage you to post to the
discussion board in Unit 10.
Thank you for a great term!
Jordyn Amaya Garner
Late Adulthood
A fond farewell…
You
have all been wonderful. Thank you
so much for your hard work and your
thoughtful contributions. I have learned a
lot myself from your insight and
experiences and I am so glad to have had
you all in my class. I hope to see you
again in the future.
Best, best wishes to you all!
Late Adulthood