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. 2020 Dec 16;4(Suppl 1):723. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igaa057.2558

Everyday Ageism and Health: Evidence From the National Poll on Healthy Aging

Julie Ober Allen 1, Erica Solway 2, Matthias Kirch 2, Dianne Singer 2, Jeffrey Kullgren 2, Preeti Malani 3
PMCID: PMC7742998

Abstract

This study examined the prevalence of everyday ageism, routine types of age-based discrimination, prejudice, and stereotyping that older adults encounter in their daily lives, and its relationships with health in a nationally representative sample age 50-80 (N=2,048, 52% female, 71% White). Nearly all older adults said they sometimes or often experienced everyday ageism (96% age 65-80, 92% age 50-64). The most common types were beliefs that health problems were an inevitable part of getting older (78%), hearing jokes about aging/older people (61%), and seeing material suggesting that older adults were unattractive/undesirable (38%). Those reporting more experiences with everyday ageism (>3 types) were less likely than those reporting fewer types to have excellent/very good physical health (31% vs. 50%); similar results were found for mental health (60% vs. 80%). This poll documented the ubiquity of minor, but not inconsequential, everyday ageism reported by older adults and its potential ramifications for health.


Articles from Innovation in Aging are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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