Abstract

Most people have luxury of growing up as members of majority in society, thus avoiding stereotype and prejudice inevitably attendant on being part of a minority group. Such a happy lot, however, is merely transitory, for all of us who reach old age-ironically, a vast majority-will join a people for whom that flavour of prejudice and stereotype known as ageism is a daily occurrence. Ageism was first described as another form of bigotry (Butler 1969), and more recently defined as creating a situation whereby the elderly in our society find themselves viewed in a predominantly negative fashion, victims of a pervasive form of discrimination and disparagement. The negative effects of such prejudice on how elderly are treated by society and on their own self-esteem are only too wellknown, and it is not purpose of this discussion to restate them once again. Rather, focus of this essay is on interesting new research which suggests that ageism may go further than social or psychological, and have serious negative physical effects, including decline in cognitive function (Levy, 1996) and altered autonomic reactivity. Such claims are examined below, beginning with an analysis of nature of stereotypes of elderly and then considering how these impact on old people's views of themselves. The discussion then assesses validity of proposed links between such views and both cognitive function and cardiovascular response to stress. This thread of research culminates in a recent paper which proposes a link between how middle aged and elderly view themselves in terms of aging, and mortality up to twenty years later (Levy et al., 2002).

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