A new study finds that
harmful stereotypes can also lead to more health problems
by Stephanie
Thurrott |April 26, 2019
Ageism isn’t just
discriminatory, it’s expensive. A recent study published in The Gerontologist put a hard number to the costs. It
reported that ageism adds $63 billion a year to healthcare spending in the
United States.
The study looked at
the eight most expensive healthcare conditions for people 60 and
over—cardiovascular disease, chronic respiratory disease, musculoskeletal
disorders, injuries, diabetes, treatment of smoking, mental disorders, and
noncommunicable diseases.
Drawing on research
on the impact of ageism,
the study compared the healthcare costs of people who experienced higher levels
of ageism to those who experienced lower levels to come up with the $63 billion
figure.
Researchers also
found that the eight health conditions were more prevalent in the group that
experienced the most ageism, estimating that more than 17 million cases of
these conditions could be attributed to the harmful stereotypes about age.
How ageism crops up
in the medical world
“There’s this notion
that there’s something wrong with older people,” says James Gruber, a social
worker who helped establish the James Gruber Endowed Fund for Aging Education
at the University of Cincinnati.
Ageism can take one
of three forms: age discrimination, negative stereotypes about older people,
and negative self-perceptions in older people about their own aging.
“Ageism can be
expressed in healthcare settings in both subtle ways, such as with elderspeak
or infantilizing language, or in more blatant ways, such as denying older
patients needed healthcare because of their age,” says Becca R. Levy, PhD,
professor of epidemiology at Yale School of Public Health and professor of
psychology at Yale University and the study’s lead author.
Something like
“elderspeak” might not sound like a big deal, but it matters. In another study,
researchers found that older people who were spoken to in a patronizing way
performed worse on a cognitive test than their peers who were not.
And ingrained beliefs
can also affect health outcomes. Another study found that young adults with
negative age stereotypes had double the likelihood of cardiovascular events up
to 40 years later, compared to those with more positive stereotypes.
Older
people who were spoken to in a patronizing way performed worse on a cognitive
test.
Ageism doesn’t always
come from the outside, either. The Gerontologist study found that
negative self-perceptions of aging were the top driver behind the increased
costs.
People with stronger
negative self-perceptions of aging agree with statements like, “The older I get
the more useless I feel.” This group is more likely to do things like not
taking prescription medication as directed.
How to combat ageism
in healthcare
To start to end the
beliefs and behaviors behind ageism, question your own assumptions about older
people. Do you believe they are frail or have memory problems?
While some older
people might have physical or cognitive impairments, it’s inaccurate to
stereotype all of them based on these assumptions.
And speak up when you
see ageist behavior. “I think people of all ages can try to monitor everyday
life for examples of ageism,” Levy says. “It is helpful to try to let others
know about it. Sometimes people express ageism without being aware of
it.”
https://considerable.com/ageism-in-healthcare-costs-a-fortune/
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