Aging Redefined: Cognitive and Physical Improvement with Positive Age Beliefs
Becca R. Levy, Martin D. Slade

TL;DR
This study shows that many older adults improve cognitively and physically over time, and positive beliefs about aging can help drive this improvement.
Contribution
The study introduces a new perspective on aging by showing measurable improvement and linking it to positive age beliefs.
Findings
45.15% of older adults showed improvement in cognitive and/or physical function over 12 years.
Positive age beliefs predicted improvement in both cognitive and physical domains.
Improvement was observed even after adjusting for relevant covariates.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: A widespread assumption exists among scientists, health care providers, and the public that later life is a time of inevitable and universal cognitive and physical decline. This assumption is likely due to considering older persons who improve to be exceptions, and the reliance on aging-health measures that do not allow for improvement. In contrast, we utilized a measure that allowed for an upward trajectory to occur. Our objective was to examine whether a meaningful number of older persons improve with this measure and, if so, to examine whether a promising modifiable culture-based variable, positive age beliefs, contributes to this improvement. Methods: Individuals 65 years and older, who participated in a nationally representative longitudinal study, had their physical health assessed by walking speed and their cognitive health assessed by a global performance…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Technology Use by Older Adults · Health disparities and outcomes
