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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper that discusses several issues concerning death and dying. The paper begins with a discussion of age ranges for senior and elderly. The paper discusses ageism and stereotypes of late adulthood. It also considers developmental views of death and dying and how people can promote health and wellness. Finally, the paper comments on different cultural rituals related to death and dying. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG695656.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
are 55 years and older can use the senior menu at restaurants. We get Medicate benefits at age 65. We qualify for our Social Security pension as early as 62
but to have full benefits, the age will be closer to 66 and that age is rising depending on when someone was born. We can get a senior rail pass
in some cities at age 60. It is no wonder, people are confused about what age category they are in. and, at 90, I dare anyone to call Betty White
elderly! The World Health Organization, the U.N., and then UK gives the age of 60 as the lowest age an individual may be considered the "older population". As mentioned full
pension benefits in the U.S. begins at age 65 although the age rises each year, it is presently 65.8 but it is 65 for men and 60 for women in
the UK. Therefore, it is concluded that the start of being elderly is also 65 (Fiddian, 2010). Ageism refers to a particular type of discrimination and prejudice by seniors.
Comedians make a lot of jokes about the memory loss older person experience (ALFA, 2009). Young people become impatient and disrespect seniors because they are slower, and doctors may
often talk over the senior patient is another adult is in the room. Ageism steals the individuals dignity, choice, and independence from them. Agencies and institutions perpetuate the stereotypes associated
with again (ALFA, 2009) which include becoming slower at nearly everything, losing mobility and coordination, loss of memory, and certain diseases that impact the older adult more than the younger
adult Erikson identified young adulthood as ages 18 to 34, middle adulthood as 35 to 55 or 65, and late adulthoods as the ages of 55 or 65 until
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