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The Loneliest Generation: Americans, More Than Ever, Are Aging Alone
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:24 am
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:24 am
quote:
Loneliness undermines health and is linked to early mortality—and baby boomers are especially feeling the effects
quote:
Danny Miner, a 66-year-old retired chemical plant supervisor, spends most days alone in his Tooele, Utah, apartment, with “Gunsmoke” reruns to keep him company and a phone that rarely rings.
Old age wasn’t supposed to feel this lonely. Mr. Miner married five times, each bride bringing the promise of lifelong companionship. Three unions ended in divorce. Two wives died. Now his legs ache and his balance is faulty, and he’s stopped going to church or meeting friends at the Marine Corps League, a group for former Marines. “I get a little depressed from time to time,” he says.
Baby boomers are aging alone more than any generation in U.S. history, and the resulting loneliness is a looming public health threat. About one in 11 Americans age 50 and older lacks a spouse, partner or living child, census figures and other research show. That amounts to about eight million people in the U.S. without close kin, the main source of companionship in old age, and their share of the population is projected to grow.
'Being alone isn't that bad of a deal, but it can be boring,' said Danny Miner, adding, after a pause, 'lonely.'
Policy makers are concerned this will strain the federal budget and undermine baby boomers’ health. Researchers have found that loneliness takes a physical toll, and is as closely linked to early mortality as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day or consuming more than six alcoholic drinks a day. Loneliness is even worse for longevity than being obese or physically inactive.
quote:
Along with financial issues including high debt and declining pensions, social factors such as loneliness are another reason boomers are experiencing more difficult retirement years than previous generations.
The lack of social contacts among older adults costs Medicare $6.7 billion a year, mostly from spending on nursing facilities and hospitalization for those who have less of a network to help out, according to a study last year by Harvard University, Stanford University and AARP.
The Price of Loneliness
Social isolation costs Medicare an estimated $6.7 billion a year, mostly from spending on nursing facilities and hospitalization.
“The effect of isolation is extraordinarily powerful,” says Donald Berwick, former administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “If we want to achieve health for our population, especially vulnerable people, we have to address loneliness.”
The Trump administration is looking at expanding faith-based partnerships to combat isolation among seniors, says U.S. Assistant Secretary for Aging Lance Robertson. Earlier this year, the British government appointed its first minister of loneliness to tackle the issue.
The baby boomers prized individuality and generally had fewer children and ended marriages in greater numbers than previous generations. More than one in four boomers is divorced or never married, census figures show. About one in six lives alone.
quote:
The University of Chicago’s General Social Survey, which has tracked American attitudes since 1972, asked respondents four years ago how often they lacked companionship, felt left out and felt isolated from others. Baby boomers said they experienced these feelings with greater frequency than any other generation, including the older “silent generation.”
quote:
ting in group activities.
Some of the health risk comes from the consequences of being alone when sickness strikes.
Gary Grasmick, a 68-year-old retired federal IT worker who lives by himself, was carrying groceries into his Washington, D.C. row house two years ago when he felt his knee give out. Overweight and unable to get up, and with no phone in reach, he laid there for at least two nights as dehydration and a urinary tract infection led to sepsis. His kidneys started shutting down and he grew delirious.
“I heard the mailman come once in a while and I would yell out,” he says. “Nobody heard me.”
you can read the rest here
No wonder y'all are a bunch of sad saps. Better yourselves you geezers.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:24 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Ima keep it real wit you, chief. Ain’t nobody reading all that
LOL
quote:
you can read the rest here
LOL
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:26 am to Mingo Was His NameO
See the beauty of having money is that I can always have some younger bitches around as long as I buy them purses and jewelry and shite
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:27 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
nd he’s stopped going to church or meeting friends at the Marine Corps League, a group for former Marines. “I get a little depressed from time to time,” he says.
So, he's now lamenting being lonely, yet he chose to stop doing the things that would make him less lonely?
66 doesn't seem too old to go do things with other people, if you so desire.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:29 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Americans, More Than Ever, Are Aging Alone
This isn't necessarily a bad thing.....I know for me I have no use for entitled, victimhood douchebags.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:31 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Suck it boomers
This is what you get for making us do 2 year unpaid internships
This is what you get for making us do 2 year unpaid internships
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:33 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Overweight and unable to get up
There's no good excuse for this. It's self inflicted and if you have also chosen to isolate yourself then you are looking for trouble and you will likely find it.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:43 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Mr. Miner married five times
Found his real problem.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:49 am to Y.A. Tittle
quote:
So, he's now lamenting being lonely, yet he chose to stop doing the things that would make him less lonely?
Depression is a motherfricker.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:52 am to WhyMan
quote:
Found his real problem.
Yep, sounds like he doesn't know how to be happy being single and always depended on someone else to make him content.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:52 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Loneliness undermines health and is linked to early mortality
quote:
Gary Grasmick, a 68-year-old retired federal IT worker who lives by himself, was carrying groceries into his Washington, D.C. row house two years ago when he felt his knee give out. Overweight and unable to get up, and with no phone in reach, he laid there for at least two nights as dehydration and a urinary tract infection led to sepsis. His kidneys started shutting down and he grew delirious.
Maybe this will cause all you depressed fatboys that are reading this to get a gym membership. After all, it is your own health you're ruining.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:52 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Aging Alone
i'm ok with this.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:54 am to Mingo Was His NameO
not reading that wall of text but here is the answer based on thread title
because bitches be crazy /thread
because bitches be crazy /thread
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:56 am to Mingo Was His NameO
All of the OT’s here who refuse to get married and have kids...this is you when you are 60.
Old, alone, lonely, and sad!
Old, alone, lonely, and sad!
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:57 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
The baby boomers prized individuality and generally had fewer children and ended marriages in greater numbers than previous generations. More than one in four boomers is divorced or never married, census figures show. About one in six lives alone.
But, but...I thought happiness is just one right-swipe away?
Posted on 12/11/18 at 11:57 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Three divorces, huh. What’s the saying: fool me once.... this is on him. Maybe his dad who fought in the war would tell him to stop being a pussy.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:01 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
It’s tempting to point and laugh but loneliness is a real issue.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:01 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
Any time at Sonic punk. Just keep working. I’m enjoying my ss. Still working and good health.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:02 pm to Mingo Was His NameO
People move across country with such ease these days. Used to be where a couple's children and grandchildren all lived within 30 minutes of where they were raised. My wife and I are already planning on moving close to our children when we retire, or become constant travelers meeting new people.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:02 pm to Teton Tiger
quote:
I’m enjoying my ss. Still working and good health.
Sorry you didn't save enough to retire
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