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Social capital and successful aging: the role of senior housing

Article Abstract:

Social capital is defined as the resources available to individuals and groups through social connections and social relations with others. Access to social capital enables older citizens to maintain productive, independent, and fulfilling lives. As the U.S. population ages, accompanied by a rise in the prevalence of seniors living alone, the availability of social capital within communities will become an important ingredient of successful aging. Recent evidence suggests that many traditional forms of social capital in communities -- as represented by civic engagement in local associations and by the extent of voluntarism and social trust -- are on the decline. If this observation is correct, there is no simple solution to rebuilding this lost social capital. Novel forms of senior housing, such as planned care developments and assisted-living facilities, may offer promising modes of delivery of social capital to the aging population. However, assisted living remains financially inaccessible for a large segment of the U.S. population, so investment in communities "aging in place" may be the key to delivering the health dividends of social capital.

Author: Kawachi, Ichiro, Cannuscio, Carolyn, Block, Jason
Publisher: American College of Physicians
Publication Name: Annals of Internal Medicine
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0003-4819
Year: 2003
Public affairs, Social aspects, Aged, Elderly, Senior citizens housing, Architecture and the aged, Social capital (Sociology), Author Abstract

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Assessing the success of successful aging

Article Abstract:

Doctors must be careful not to define successful aging as the absence of disease and disability. It may be better to ask their elderly patients how they define successful aging. Then the doctor can provide whatever advice or interventions will most likely help the patient achieve that goal.

Author: Glass, Thomas A.
Publisher: American College of Physicians
Publication Name: Annals of Internal Medicine
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0003-4819
Year: 2003
Aging, Editorial

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