Betty White and the Need for Older TV Stars

As America ages, isn't it time we had more older stars on TV?

Betty White made history this weekend, becoming the first 88-year-old host of Saturday Night Live.  SNL attained its best ratings in almost two years.  Here's to more talented older hosts in the future.  Kudos, Betty, for Changing Aging, and having a sense of humor in doing it.  (OK, Betty is a native of Illinois, but her Mary Tyler Moore role, which was set in Minneapolis, makes her an honorary Minnesotan.)

Marion Ross - native Minnesotan who starred in Happy Days was on Nurse Jackie, the Showtime hit, the other day.  She played a hospital patient who was neglected by her home health care aide.  Marion did a great job, but it would be nice to see her play other roles, too. 


George Clooney Has Long-Term Care on His Mind

George Clooney is enlisting friends Matt Damon and Brad Pitt to try to save a nursing home in Hollywood.  The nursing home is the Motion Picture and Television Fund nursing home, which cares for people who worked in film and television.  I don't know all the ins and outs of the debate, but it looks like the nursing home, as many are in the U.S., is losing huge amounts of money, as Medicaid reimbursement continually gets cut.  This same drama plays out - minus the Hollywood stars - in communities across the U.S., underscoring the need to transform how we pay for long-term care in the U.S.

The stars and others seeking to save the nursing home have created an only-in-Hollywood campaign complete with dramatic video at www.savingthelivesofourown.org.  It would be great to have George, Matt, Brad and the other stars to bring their advocacy nationally and shine the spotlight in America that we need to build the infrastructure and financing system to support America's elders with dignity. 

As U.S. Health Secretary Kathy Sebelius looks how to market the CLASS Act, America's new public long-term care insurance plan, perhaps these stars can come on board as they've got long-term care on their minds.


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Grandparents Walking All The Way Around Lake Superior, Adventures in Aging Part 2

Two grandparents are walking all the way around Lake Superior . . .  Mike Link and Kate Crowley departed Duluth, Minn., last week, near Ecumen's Bayshore and Lakeshore communites, and started walking toward Wisconsin . . . they're going to walk completely around Lake Superior by Labor Day.  Mike and  Kate will become the oldest circumnavigators to have hiked around the largest body of freshwater in the world.  

Follow their travels here.  This is very cool (glad to see they have their polar fleece).

When they get to Bayfield, Wis., they should stop in at the CORE offices, which we blogged about here.  Also, here's another adventure in aging - Kara Buckner's 81-day trip around the world.

Good wishes to Mike and Kate!


Senior man and woman having coffee at table seen through window

Fear and Neighbors With Alzheimer's

NIMBY and Memory Care.  It's a new one.  Minneapolis Star Tribune columnist Jon Tevlin has a column today about a Woodbury, Minn., neighborhood that has some residents that are opposing memory care housing.  Ecumen is a consultant to the developer .  Some have expressed fear of having their kids live near people with Alzheimer's. 

I've seen NIMBY (not in my backyard) cases related to building size, traffic, parking, etc., but never because of fear with people with Alzheimer's.  Has anyone else ever seen that?  


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Adventures in Aging, Part 1, Around the World in 81 Days

Are you including adventures in your aging journey?  Kara Buckner is and she's taking a number of Ecumen customers with her on her trip 81-day trip around the world through her blog "Let's Karavan." 

Kara quit her job, rid herself of her house and her her car, bought a ticket on Delta Airlines and is going around the world in 81 days.  She's been to Antarctica, Argentina, Chile and elsewhere.  Today she's traveling to South Africa.

If you visit the memory care apartments at Ecumen's Lakeview Commons community in Maplewood, Minn., you'll see in one of the gathering areas a large global map where customers are tracking daily the global travels of Kara, who is the cousin of Ecumen colleague Andrea Nye.  Kara blogs daily on her adventures.  I dig her posts and her evolving defintion of home, which she described while in Buenos Aires.


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Leisure World's World is Changing

Some age-restricted communities have just awful names.  Looks like Leisure World, which used to be all the rage in new-fangled senior housing communities is due for an identity update.

Leisure World began in 1960 as one of the country's first planned retirement communities.  Several more were built in California.  Now about 100 Leisure World residents are lobbying to get rid of the name Leisure World, saying it doesn't reflect who they are.

"The reason I believe that now is the time is because we are going to be getting a new demographic retiring, so-called boomers, and they don't want to be in anything that smacks of inactivity or retirement," said Anne Seifert, president of the Where We Live club, in the Orange County Register. "The 60-years-old people are (the new) 30."

The club is holding a community forum about the name update proposal on April 23 and May 14. The group is suggesting Leisure World be changed to Seal Beach Pointe, Seal Beach Highlands or Seal Beach Meadows.

"It's not very pleasant to say, 'I live here' and then you're the butt of the joke," she said. "The name no longer fits the residents who are here. Today's 60-plus residents are active in sports, volunteer and many have encore jobs," Seifert said.

Aging is Changing at Leisure World and in America.


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Happiness' Impact on How We Age

Are you happy? After reading this you might want to smile more.

Thanks to Rita Watson, an associate fellow at Yale's Ezra Stiles College. She recently highlighted several scientific investigations on happiness. They bode well for how we age:

- The European Heart Journal recently published the findings of Dr. Karina Davidson of Columbia University Medical Center. Her team followed 1,739 people for 10 years participating in the Nova Scotia Health Survey. Their findings: Happier people are less likely to develop heart disease than crabby ones.

- A study at the University of Kentucky involved 124 first-year law students tracked over four years. The findings, in the March Psychological Science, noted that in each individual, optimism was reflected by strong cell-mediated immunity. Just as our bodies send cells to fight infection when we have a cut or wound, optimism helps us stay healthy.

- Alzheimer's prevention was reported in the Archives of General Psychiatry recently, with a study of 951 "community-dwelling older persons without dementia from the Rush Memory and Aging Project in areas around Chicago. Dr. Patricia Boyle and her team found that those who had a greater purpose in life had a reduced risk of Alzheimer's and milder cognitive impairment


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Johnny Cash's Last Video - The Power of Stories, Aging and Experience

Stories connect.  Stories engage.  Everyone has a story.  And those stories get richer with age, as demonstrated in Johnny Cash's final music video.


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LGBT Elders' Challenges Highlighted in Outing Age

Outing Age 2010 shines spotlight on challenges facing millions of LGBT people as they age.  Despite recent advances, this report documents widespread discrimination encountered by LGBT elders, and offers substantive policy recommendations.  You can download the whole report here.


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Grow Old if You Want to Get Better at Solving Conflict

New University of Michigan research indicates what most in senior services already knew, our elder are indeed wise — especially in knowing how to deal with conflicts and accepting life's uncertainties and change.  Read more about the study.