“we looked at reports on what older adults think of as being important,” fuller-thomson says of what characterized excellent health for the study from an older person’s perspective. “they identify being able to manage in their activities of daily living, feeding themselves, cooking, toileting, walking upstairs, walking — just daily activities that you need to do, and they wanted to continue to maintain that. and that was our standard.”
three-quarters of the respondents who were aged 55 to 64 at the start of the study period maintained excellent health throughout the study. among those aged 80 and older, about half remained in excellent health.
“we were delighted to see that so many people were doing well,” she says. “we normally think when you’re over 80, it’s a downward trajectory. eventually people are going to get ill, but to see that so many people were doing well gives us a lot of hope.”
while the observations of good habits like weight management, not smoking, physical activity and social connectedness are not surprising, the point is that people have the ability to stave off mental, cognitive and emotional decline.
a gap between what we know about healthy aging and what actually happens