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This book provides a bi-national portrait of dementia in the rapidly aging Mexican-origin population in Mexico and the United States. It provides a comprehensive overview of critical conceptual and methodological issues in the study of cognitive aging and related mental and physical conditions. The book examines the sources of vulnerability and their consequences for Mexican-origin and for “aging in place”. By providing a combination of new knowledge, empirical evidence, and fresh approaches of dementia support in later life, this book will contribute to moving the field of Mexican-origin aging and health forward. By focusing on the serious challenges in old-age support for older people with dementia and neurocognitive disorders in two different contexts, this book will deepen academics, researchers, students and young investigators understanding of what is necessary to achieve optional care.
The related text for the publications page on the WHO website will be as follows: WHO’s comprehensive response to population ageing and health is to promote healthy ageing over the life course. The new area of work led by the Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health and Ageing (MCA), within its cross-cutting work on healthy trajectories and concentrating on connecting healthy development and healthy ageing across the life course, was launched in the kick-off meeting on 9-10 June 2022. The virtual meeting included 30 speakers from a range of national and international perspectives and was attended by wide range of participants from all six WHO regions. Key issues and questions for research were identified for each life stage, and across life stages, on ways to operationalize life course interventions and measure their impact. Multisectoral actions required to optimize functional ability and well-being across the life course was emphasized. Finally, the meeting initiated the development of a collaborative network of life course centers worldwide interested to work together.
World Health Organization (WHO)’s work on the life course – connecting healthy development and healthy ageing – aims to extend learning on healthy ageing and connect it to other efforts to improve people’s abilities and capacities, such as supports for early child development. This perspective considers the well-being of the whole person, not simply a focus on illness or disease. The third Life Course Network meeting followed two previous meetings in June and December 2022. The WHO Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health and Ageing (MCA) hosted a hybrid meeting in Geneva, 28–30 November 2023, with over 40 experts leading eight working groups of 200 individuals from life course research centres, other academics, policy-makers, civil society and representatives from the six WHO regional offices and other WHO staff, attending the meeting in person. Working groups and the MCA Life Course team prepared and discussed 18 project papers, including a draft WHO-wide framework on putting a life course approach into practice. The meeting comprised six sessions to take stock of progress and facilitate learning across working groups.
The increase in average life expectancy observed over recent decades has brought new challenges to nephrology practice. Several renal diseases are more frequent in elderly patients today, and even in healthy older individuals renal physiology has its own peculiarities. This leads to the need for a specific approach on renal aging and renal function in the elderly. However, despite the relevance of this topic, there are few books exclusively dedicated to geriatric nephrology. This book fills this gap by presenting a comprehensive overview of the differences between normal renal aging and chronic renal disease in the aged, and describes the particular aspects of nephropathy in the elderly, add...
Sarcopenia is a geriatric syndrome with progressive loss of mass, quality and function of skeletal muscles associated with aging. Its prevalence may reach 30% for people over 60 in European populations. Sarcopenia is a multifactorial process: some factors lead to the development of sarcopenia and its associated negative effect on physical function. The loss of skeletal muscle fibers secondary to the reduced number of motor neurons appears to contribute significantly to the disorder, which may further include reduced levels of hormones (particularly GH, IGF-1, MGF, and testosterone), lack of protein and calories of the diet, oxidative stress, inflammatory processes etc. Sarcopenia requires a rehabilitation program to improve physical performance but also nutritional interventions: protein supplementation combined with exercise, leucine-enriched amino acids and vitamin D supplementation, as adjunctive therapy.
The United Nations Madrid International Plan of Action on Ageing (MIPAA) offers a bold new agenda for handling the issue of ageing in the 21st century. It focuses on three priority areas: older persons and development; advancing health and well-being into old age; and ensuring enabling and supportive environments. This book brings together global perspectives on the MIPAA and focusses on and assesses the success and failures of governments to implement its recommendations. Despite its pivotal importance in international ageing policy, the MIPAA has been relatively neglected by academics in their writings and studies. This book mitigates this analytical and empirical cavity. Each chapter focu...
The Decade of Healthy Ageing 2021-2030 will focus on four key actions: changing how we think, feel and act towards age and ageing; developing communities in ways that foster the abilities of older people; delivering integrated care and primary health services that are responsive to the needs of older people; and providing older people who need it with access to long-term care. All are critical for building back better, and for fostering healthy ageing. The Baseline Report for the Decade of Healthy Ageing 2021−2030 addresses five issues so that policy-makers and others in government, the private sector, civil society and research are committed to implementing actions to achieve the ambitiou...
The 2020 annual meeting of the WHO Clinical Consortium on Healthy Ageing (CCHA) was the sixth gathering of an international group of clinical leaders, drawn from the full breadth of the field of ageing to progress the work agreed by Member States under the 2016 WHO Global Strategy and Action Plan on Ageing and Health and the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021-2030). This meeting report summarizes the discussion and provide the opportunities for potential future action to advance two action areas of the Decade: Integrated care and Long-term care.
The 2020 annual meeting of the WHO Consortium on Metrics and Evidence for Healthy Ageing was the fourth gathering of an international group of experts from all WHO regions, including policy-makers, civil society organizers and researchers, drawn from the full breadth of the field of ageing to progress the work agreed by Member States under the 2016 WHO Global Strategy and Action Plan on Ageing (GSAP) and the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021-2030). This meeting report summarizes the discussions on the contributions of CMEHA members to the Decade of Healthy Ageing: Baseline Report (launched 17 December 2020), and next steps in view of the strengths, gaps and opportunities identified. It also outlines the next steps for implementing the Decade of Healthy Ageing in line with metrics and evidence, and derivative products related to the Baseline Report.