Articles & Studies
Explore active aging, aging in Jewish life, cultural trends and organizational developments.
A library of important articles, reports and findings. (If that description fits something you’ve written or read, please send it to us to share!)
Featured Active Aging Articles & Studies
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If price is no object, neither is death
How to buy yourself a longer life
Frank Bruni, The New York Times, May 23, 2024
THE UNSTOPPABLES: Ali MacGraw on Her Natural, Beautiful Life
With “Love Story,” she shot to Hollywood stardom at 30. It wasn’t until later that the actress, now 85, found fulfillment in New Mexico.
The New York Times Interview by Guy Trebay
May 22, 2024
Middle age shouldn’t be a drag. How a ‘chrysalis’ mind-set can help.
By Lisa J. Wise
For those struggling with middle-age challenges, look for the possibilities in this transitional age, the writer says.
From the Washington Post; click here.
On aging, maybe America needs to grow up
By Fiona de Merell, Director of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of Connecticut, February 20, 2024
As Americans gear up for a grueling election year, we keep seeing articles about “how old is too old” to be president, and whether there should be an age limit on those who hold presidential office. But how old is “too old” when it comes to running for public office, holding a job, managing a company, driving a vehicle, or even raising a child?
Click here to read.
Why Do We Age? Scientists Are Figuring It Out.
By Dana G. Smith, The New York Times.
Published March 20, 2024; Updated March 25, 2024
Researchers are investigating how our biology changes as we grow older — and whether there are ways to stop it.
Click here to read.
Pandemic's Effect in Isolating Older Americans May Not Be Over
by Dennis Thompson.
COVID-19 lockdowns prompted countless American seniors to become socially isolated.
Now, new research finds that many have still not fully rejoined society.
More than half of older adults still spend more time at home and less time out socializing in public, even though the pandemic has passed, researchers found.
Click here to read.
“People think ‘old age’ starts later than it used to, study finds” from the American Psychological Association
The researchers also looked at how individual participants’ perceptions of old age changed as they got older. They found that as individuals aged, their perception of the onset of old age was pushed further out. At age 64, the average participant said old age started at 74.7. At age 74, they said old age started at 76.8. On average, the perceived onset of old age increased by about one year for every four to five years of actual aging.
Click here to read.
Postponing Old Age: Evidence for Historical Change Toward a Later Perceived Onset of Older Age
By Marcus Wettstein et al, American Psychological Association.
This article provides a detailed report on recent research that people are considering old age to commence at older ages.
Click here to read.
What years are baby boomers? Here's how old this generation is in 2023.
What years are baby boomers? Here's how old this generation is in 2023. By Claire Mulroy, USA Today, March 1, 2023
Helpful info about Baby Boomers—and the Baby Boom cohort.
Click here.
Boomers and Millenials: Boomers seem to have traded in the child-raising village for traveling.
Boomers and Millenials: Boomers seem to have traded in the child-raising village for traveling. Now millennial parents say they have no one to support them. A report from Business Insider, December 7, 2023.
Millennials have put off having children, so boomers are the oldest grandparents ever. At the same time, boomers are outspending other generations on travel and dining out. Many millennial parents say they can't get the support they need from their parents.
Click here.
Concern about declining levels of volunteering
Concern about declining levels of volunteering—reported in Axios, December 19,2023; key excerpt:
The share of Americans who give time to soup kitchens, homeless shelters and food pantries is declining…23% of Americans…volunteered in 2021, per the latest census data. That was the lowest share since tracking began in the early 2000s, The Washington Post reports. Nonprofits of all sizes and purposes are in dire need of volunteers — especially during the holidays and winter months. Shelters, mentoring programs and food pantries are shuttering due to the dwindling pool of helpers. Levels of volunteering haven't bounced back from the lows of the pandemic, when lockdowns kept people away.