Psychology 210
Psychology 210 Mrs. Harris
Liberty University
Liberty University
Terms
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- Senile Macular Degeneration
- A disease of the eye involving deterioration of the retina.
- 10, 5
- Only ___ percent of the elderly are dependent, and only ___ percent are in nursing homes or hospitals.
- Grief
- An individual's emotional response to bereavement
- Living Will
- A document that indicates what medical intervention an individual wants if he or she becomes incapable of expressing those wishes.
- Disengagement Theory
- The view that aging makes a person's social sphere increasingly narrow, resulting in role relinquishment, withdrawal, and passivity.
- Oxygen Free Radicals
- Atoms that as a result of metabolic processes, have an unpaired electron. They produce errors in cell maintenance and repair that, over time, may cause cancer, diabetes and arteriosclerosis.
- Instrumental activities of Daily Life
- Actions that are important to independent living and that require some intellectual competence and forethought. These are even more critical to self sufficiency than ADLs.
- Stratification Theories
- Theories emphasizing that social forces, particularly those related to a person's social stratum or social category, limit individual choices and affect the ability to funciton, In the late adulthood, past stratification continues to limit life in various ways.
- Social Convoy
- Collectively, the family members, friends, acquaintances, and even strangers who move through life with an individual.
- Oldest- Old
- Elderly adults (generally over the age of 85) who are dependent on others for almost everything, requiring supportive services such as nursing homes and hospital stays.
- Life Review
- The examination of one's own past life that many elderly people engage in.
- Alzheimer's Disease
- The most common form of dementia, characterized by gradual deterioration of memory and personality and marked by plaques of B- amyloid protein and tangles in the brain.
- VaD/MID
- The form of dementia characterized by sporadic and progressive loss of intellectual functioning.
- Education and Volunteer
- Many retired people continue their ___ or perform ___ work in their communities.
- Dynamic Theories
- Theories that emphasize change and readjustment rather than wither the ongoing self or the legacy of stratification. Each person's life is seen as an active, ever changing, largely self propelled process, occuring within specific social contexts that themselves are constantly changing.
- Antioxidants
- Compounds that nullify the effects of oxygen free radicals by forming a bond with their unattached oxygen electron.
- Subcortical Dementias
- Dementias, such as Parkinson's, Huntington's and multiple sclerosis that originate in the subcortex. These diseases begin with impairments in motor ability and produce cognitive impairment in later stages.
- Activities of Daily Life
- Actions that are important to independent living, typically comprising five task: eating, bathing, toileting, dressing, and transferring from a bed to a chair.
- Organ
- Primary aging reduces ____ reserve in the major body systems.
- Politically
- The elderly are ____ active and influential, which is one reason for their success in protecting their economic benefits.
- Ageism
- Refers to prejudice against people because of their age. Like racism and sexism, it works to prevent elderly from being as happy and productive as they could be.
- Integrity vs. Despair
- The final stage of Erikson's developmental sequence, in which older adults seek to integrate their unique experience with their vision of community.
- Family and Religious Connections
- Many older members of minority groups function very well, primarily because of strong___ and ___
- Self Theories
- Theories of late adulthood that emphasize the core self, or the search to maintain one's integrity and identity.
- Respite Care
- An arrangement in which a professional caregiver takes over to give the family caregiver of a frail elderly person a break for a few hours each day or for an occasional weekend.
- Secondary Aging
- The specific physical illnesses or conditions that are more common in agingbut are caused by health habits, genes, and other influences that vary from person to person.
- Genetic Clock
- According to one theory of aging, a regulatory mechanism in the DNA of cells regulates the aging process.
- Palliative Care
- Care designed not to treat an illness, but to relieve the pain and suffering of the patient
- Terminal Decline
- An overall slowdown of cognitive abilities in the days or months before death. Also called Terminal Drop.
- Health Care Proxy
- a person chosen by another person to make medical decisions if the second person becomes unable to do so.
- 90
- ___ percent of older people need glasses, and meny have cataracts, glaucoma or senile macular degeneration.
- Cataracts
- A common eye disease among the elderly involving a thickening of the lens; it can cause distorted vision if left untreated.
- Average Life Expectancy
- The number of years the average newborn of a particular population group is likely to live. In humans, this age has tended to increase over time, primarily because fewer children die in infancy.
- Continuity Theory
- The theory that each person experiences the changes of late adulthood and behaves toward others in much the same way as earlier periods of life.
- Bereavement
- The sense of loss following a death
- False
- T or F: Cell reproduction increases and gets better.
- Spouse
- The ___ is the most important member of a person's social convoy.
- Wisdom
- A cognitive perspective characterized by a broad, practical, comprehensive approach to life's problems, reflecting timeless truths rather than immediate expediency.
- Glaucoma
- A disease of the eye that can destroy vision if left untreated. It involves hardening of the eyeball due to fluid buildup within the eye.
- Gerontology
- The study of old age. This is one of the fastest growing special feilds in the social sciences.
- Elderhostel
- A program in which people aged 55 and older live on college campuses and take special classes, usually during college vacation periods.
- Frail Elderly
- People over age 65 who are physically infirm, very ill, or cognitively impaired.
- B Cells
- Cells manufactured in the bone marrow that creates antibodies for isolating and destroying invading bacteria and viruses.
- T Cells
- Cells created in the thymus that produce substances that attack infected cells in the body.
- Hayflick Limit
- The # of times a human cell is capable of dividing into two new cells. The limit for most human cells is approximately 50 divisions, suggesting that the life span is limited by our genetic program.
- Mourning
- The ceremonies and behaviors that a religion of culture prescribes for bereaved people.
- Passive Euthanasia
- A situation in which a seriously ill person is allowed to die, naturally, through the cessation of medical interventions
- Wear and Tear Theory
- A theory of aging that states that the human body wears out because of the passage of time and exposure to environmental stressors.
- Physician Assisted Suicide
- A form of active euthanasia in which a doctor provides the means for someone to end his or her own life.
- Genetic Personality Traits
- It may continue to play a major role in the way late adulthood plays itself out.
- True
- T or F: Most older adults are happy, quite healthy and active.
- Implicit Memory
- Unconscious or automatic memory that is usually stored via habits, emotional responses, routine procedures and various sensations.
- Control Processes
- That part of the information processing system that regulates the analysis and flow of information. Memory and retrieval strategies, selective attention, and rules or strategies for problem solving are all useful.
- Elderspeak
- A way of speaking to older adults that resembles baby talk, with simple and short sentences, exaggerated emphasis, a slower rate, higher pitch and repetition.
- Old- Old
- Older adults (generally over age 75) who suffer from physical, mental, or social deficits.
- Dementia
- Irreversible loss of intellectual functioning caused by organic brain damage or disease.
- Thanatology
- The study of death
- 100
- More and more people are reaching the age of ___
- Young- Old
- Healthy, vigorous, financially secure older adults ( generally, those over 75) who are well intergrated into the lives of their families and their communities.
- Explicit Memory
- Memory that is easy to retrieve, usually with words. Most involves consciously learned words, data, and concepts.
- Geriatrics
- The medical specialty devoted to aging.
- Active Euthanasia
- A situation in which someone takes action to bring about another person's death, with the intention of ending that person's suffering.
- Hospice
- An institution in which terminally ill patients recieve pallitative care.
- Dependency Ratio
- The ratio of self- sufficient, productive adults to dependents- children and the elderly
- Double Effect
- A situation in which medication has the intended effect of relieving a dying person's pain and the secondary effect of hastening death.
- Parkinson's Disease
- A chronic, progressive disease that is characterized by muscle tremors and rigidity and sometimes dementia, caused by a reduction of dopamine production in the brain.
- Primary Aging
- The universal and irreversible physical changes that occur to living creatures as they grow older.
- Compression of Morbidity
- A limiting of the time a person spends ill or infirm, accomplished by postponing illness and , once morbidity occurs, reducing the amount of time that remains before death occurs.
- Voluntary Euthanasia
- A form of active euthanasia in which, at a patient's request, someone else ends his or her life.
- Maxium Life Span
- The oldest age to which members can live, under ideal circumstances. For humans that age is approximately 120 years.
- Activity Theory
- The view that elderly people need to remain active in a variety of social spheres with relatives, friends, and community groups and become withdrawn only unwillingly, as a result of ageism.