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Stories tagged with “aging

NEWS FLASH

By 2030, One-Third Of Prisoners Incarcerated In The U.S. Will Be Over 50 | Because of “tough-on-crime” legislation that extended prison sentences and eliminated parole opportunities in the 1980s and 1990s, the number of aging prisoners incarcerated in the U.S. is growing more rapidly every year, according to Mother Jones. This expansion only adds to the cost of caring for prisoners — it costs roughly twice as much to care for a prisoner over 50. By 2030, the ACLU estimates that people over age 50 will account for one-third of the prison population despite the fact that older prisoners rarely return after they are released:

NEWS FLASH

Report: Elderly Americans Are Living Longer, Healthier | According to a government report about the well-being of older Americans, today’s 65-year-olds can expect to live longer — to age 85, compared to 79 in 1980 — and healthier than previous generations. Deaths from heart disease and stroke have dropped almost 50 percent, which has helped to increase the average life expectancy for Americans. But a dozen developed nations had longer life expectancies than America’s. Even though the U.S. and Japan had about equal life expectancies 30 years ago, Japanese citizens live about four years longer — to 89 — on average than Americans.

Alyssa

‘Robot & Frank,’ and Technology and Aging

I’m quite looking forward to Robot & Frank, a story about an aging jewel thief and the robot he’s given to keep him company, not just because of the absurdly terrific cast, or the fact that it’s near-future science fiction, which tends to employ small changes rather than broad metaphors, to sharp effect:

Robot & Frank is a case where the scenario in which the technology’s being employed—to resume Frank’s heist career, and get revenge on the tech nerds who are taking over the local library—is actually more baroque than the technology itself. Japanese companies have long been at work developing robots to assist in many aspects of elder care. Technology companies depend on our ability to develop low-level emotional bonds with technology ranging from Roombas, which act as surrogate pets, to Apple’s Siri voice technology. And the continued work and social lives of aging people, as well as elder care, are major issues that Hollywood almost never has the courage to touch, much less approach from the perspective of people who are aging rather than the younger people who will take lessons from them. I’m almost as excited for a thoughtful, funny, fully human story about retirees as I am to see a movie about robots.

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