Aging and COVID-19: Lessons Learned

IF 2.8 0 GERONTOLOGY Activities Adaptation & Aging Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/01924788.2022.2132602
Weng Marc Lim, Carmen Bowman
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

ABSTRACT Aging continues irrespective of event, location, and time; it is a process that does not stop or pause. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has impacted the community of older adults as profoundly as any other community. However, communities are not homogenous and older adults as a community are different in their own ways (e.g., digital immigrant baby boomers who are generally not as tech-savvy as digital native millennials (Gen Y) and zoomers (Gen Z); generally have a higher risk of morbidity and mortality, lower physical strength and mobility, and greater vulnerability to public health crises as compared to their younger counterparts). As COVID-19 becomes endemic, it is an opportune time to reflect on the lessons learned from COVID-19 for healthy and seamless aging. This article sheds light on such lessons (i.e., implications for preparedness management and opportunity leveraging) emerging out of the latest articles published during COVID-19 in the current issue of Activities, Adaptation & Aging: Dignified and Purposeful Living for Older Adults.
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老龄化与新冠肺炎:经验教训
与事件、地点和时间无关,衰老仍在继续;这是一个不会停止或暂停的过程。2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行对老年人社区的影响与其他社区一样深刻。然而,社区并不是同质的,老年人作为一个社区也有自己的不同之处(例如,数字移民婴儿潮一代,他们通常不像数字原生千禧一代(Y世代)和Z世代)那样精通技术;与年轻人相比,他们的发病率和死亡率一般较高,体力和活动能力较低,更容易受到公共卫生危机的影响)。随着COVID-19的流行,这是一个反思从COVID-19中吸取的教训,以实现健康和无缝老龄化的好时机。本文阐述了本期《活动、适应与老龄化:老年人有尊严和有目的的生活》在2019冠状病毒病期间发表的最新文章中得出的这些经验教训(即对准备管理和机会利用的影响)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
53.60%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Activities, Adaptation, & Aging is the working tool for activity directors and all health care professionals concerned with the enhancement of the lives of the aged. Established as the primary journal for activity professionals, Activities, Adaptation & Aging provides a professional outlet for research regarding the therapeutic implications of activities on quality-of-life issues and overall life satisfaction for the elderly. The journal examines a wide spectrum of activities: activity-based intervention for persons with dementia; activity determinants in independent-living elderly; activity implications in a variety of settings; activity participation patterns; and activity implications for everyday practice.
期刊最新文献
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