Elders' stereotypes predict hearing decline, says
study
Editor: I think we can all agree that our attitudes can affect our
physical well-being. So it should come as no surprise that older people
who have negative stereotypes about the elderly are more likely to
develop hearing loss, right?
Here's the story from the folks at Yale University
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Older people who have negative stereotypes about the elderly have a
greater chance of hearing decline, researchers at the School of Medicine
report in the March issue of Journals of Gerontology.
"This is the first study to demonstrate that older individuals'
age stereotypes can predict their sensory perception," says first
author Becca R. Levy, associate professor in the Departments of
Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) and of Psychology.
"Although a wide array of biological factors have been
identified that contribute to hearing decline, our team felt it was
important to understand whether social psychological factors, such as
the age stereotypes that individuals take in from their culture, may
also influence hearing," said Levy.
Levy and her team studied 546 people age 70 and older. The participants
were part of the Precipitating Events Project, a long-term study of
residents of the Greater New Haven area. Their age stereotypes were
measured when they entered the study. Hearing was measured with a
hand-held audioscope at the beginning of the study at baseline and again
three years later.
To measure age stereotypes, participants were asked, "When you
think of an old person, what are the first five words or phrases that
come to mind?" The responses were judged on how negative or
positive they were and how internal or external they were.
Stereotypes rated as negative included "senile" and
"feeble," whereas stereotypes rated as positive included
"wise" and "active." External stereotypes included
visual images such as grey hair, wrinkles and stooped posture. The study
adjusted for initial levels of hearing, as well as several other
variables that are known to affect hearing including age, education,
gender, race, depression, chronic conditions and smoking history.
Older persons with more negative and external age stereotypes
performed worse on hearing measures at the end of the three-year study.
According to Levy, "Hearing loss is the third most common chronic
condition among persons age 65 years and older and can lead to increased
social isolation, self-denigration, loneliness and depression."
Both negative and external age stereotypes could have adverse
health-behavior consequences, such as older individuals becoming more
accepting of hearing loss than younger people and not seeking medical
attention, says Levy.
Other authors on the study were Martin D. Slade and Dr. Thomas M.
Gill.
The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging and was
conducted at Yale EPH and the Yale Claude D. Pepper Older Americans
Independence Center.