
As more new senior housing is delivered every year, more evidence piles up that the generation expected to move into it has other ideas.
As more new senior housing is delivered every year, more evidence piles up that the generation expected to move into it has other ideas.
It’s the mother of all untapped markets: the world’s 65-plus population. Already at a historical high of over 600 million people, it’s projected to hit a full billion by 2030, and 1.6 billion by 2050.
“We like to think that we’ve designed into the home what they would need to stay independent, and that’s why we really call it active adult housing”
If you are planning to age in place, have you considered how you will combat loneliness? A recent study conducted by Cornell and published inPsychology and Aging explores the adverse effects of loneliness on health and aging. According to the study, loneliness produces changes in the body that mimic the aging process and increase the risk of heart disease.
Researchers measured cardiovascular reactivity and recovery in 91 young adults (aged 18 to 30) and 91 older adults (aged 65 to 80) who were asked to give a speech and do mental arithmetic in a lab setting. They assessed each person’s level of loneliness before the tasks, and took systolic and diastolic blood pressure measurements before, during, and after the tasks. Lead author Anthony Ong distinguishes between the temporary pains of acute loneliness, which can motivate us to create or repair our social connections, and chronic loneliness that is more likely to cause health problems over time.