Chapter 13 Review (Sociology test #3)
Fertility decline, mortality rate decline, a change in the migration rate
3 reasons why the population is aging
Geriatrics
A medical specialty focusing on the elderly
Medicaid being in danger of going bankrupt
America's baby boomer generation has contributed to all of the following except:
Filial piety
Deference and respect to one's parents and ancestors in all things
Hospice
Health care that treats terminally ill people by providing comfort during the dying process
8 million more
How many more older Americans are there than teenagers today?
Live a little longer
In most countries, elderly women __________ than elderly men.
Social security and Medicare
One of every two tax dollars is spent on what two programs?
Centenarians
People 100 years old or older
Commit suicide
Veterans are two to four times more likely to ____________ as people who did not serve in the military.
Age is based on cultural attitudes that are rooted in a society
What does it mean when sociologist say that age is "socially constructed"?
13%
What percent of the population of the US is 65+ today?
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
Who wrote the book on Death and dying, outlining the five stages of grief?
Gerontology
A field of science that seeks to understand the process of aging and the challenges encountered as seniors grow older
Cohort
A group of people who share a statistical or demographic trait
Grief
A psychological, emotional, and social response to the feelings of loss that accompanies death or a similar event
Secondary aging
Aging that occurs due to controllable factors like exercise and diet
Baby boomers
Americans born between approximately 1946 and 1964
Disengagement
An older man retires from his job, stops golfing, and cancels his newspaper subscription. After his wife dies, he lives alone, loses touch with his children, and stops seeing old friends. His situation most closely illustrates the __________ theory.
Activity
An older woman retires and completely changes her life. She is no longer raising children or working. However, she joins the YMCA to swim everyday. She serves on the Friends of the Library board. She is part of a neighborhood group that plays Bunco on Saturday nights. Her situation most closely illustrates the _____________ theory.
Ageism
Discrimination based on age
Acceptance
Francis has recently been told that he has a terminal disease and can expect to live for only a short time. He has made a will, paid all his bills, and given instructions to his children. According to Kubler-Ross, Francis is in the stage of?
Caregivers
If elderly people suffer abuse, it is most often perpetrated by __________.
Overcoming despair to achieve integrity
In Erik Erikson's developmental stages of life, with which challenge must older people struggle?
Continued to gradually rise
In the United States, life expectancy rates in recent decades have ____________.
Death and dying
Thanatology is the study of _________.
The increasing percentage of the population over 65
The "graying of the United States" refers to _________.
Age stratification
The age discrimination in employment act counteracts which theory?
senescence
The aging process, including biological, intellectual, emotional, social and spiritual changes
Biology, personal history, gender age, chronological age, and being functional
The five factors that society may classify someone as old
Gerotranscendence
The idea that as people age, they transcend limited views of life they held in earlier times
Sex ratio
The measure that compares the number of men to women in a population is ________.
Dependency ratio
The number of productive working citizens to non-productive (young, disabled, or elderly)
Life expectancy
The number of years a newborn is expected to live
Physician-assisted suicide
The voluntary use of lethal medication provided by a medical doctor to end one's life
Subculture of aging theory
Theory that focuses on the shared community created by the elderly when they are excluded (due to age), voluntarily or involuntarily, from participating in other groups
Age stratification theory
Theory which states that members of society are stratified by age, just as they are stratified by race, class and gender
Social gerontology
A specialized field of gerontology that examines the social (and sociological) aspects of aging
Gerontocracy
A type of social structure wherein the power is held by a society's oldest members
Selective optimization with compensation theory
Based on the idea that successful personal development throughout the life course and subsequent mastery of the challenges associated with everyday life are based on the components of selection, optimization, and compensation
Primary aging
Biological factors such as molecular and cellular changes
The typical sequence of events in their lives
For individual people of a certain culture, the life course is ___________.
Gender
In US society, men with graying hair and wrinkles are seen as mature, while women with the same features are seen as old. This is referred to as ___________ age.
120-122 years is the maximum length possible
Life span, what it is in years
Life course
The period from birth to death, including a sequence of predicable life events
Thanatology
The systematic study of death and dying
Social security
What government program set 65 as the retirement age?
Continuity theory
Theory which states that the elderly make specific choices to maintain consistency in internal (personality structure, beliefs) and external structures (relationships), remaining active and involved throughout their elder years
Activity theory
Theory which suggests that for individuals to enjoy old age and feel satisfied, they must maintain activities and find a replacement for statuses and associated roles they have left behind as they aged.
Modernization theory
Theory which suggests that the primary cause of the elderly losing power and influence in society are the parallel forces of industrialization and modernization
Exchange theory
Theory which suggests that we experience an increased dependence as we age and must increasingly submit to the will of others, because we have fewer way of compelling other to submit to us.
Disengagement theory
Theory which suggests that withdrawing from society and social relationships is a natural part of growing old.
Increasing
Today in the US the poverty rate of the elderly is __________.
37
What is the approximate median age of the United States?
65+
What is the fastest growing segment of the population?
Industrialization
What is the primary driver of the Modernization theory?
2/3
What percent of people who have reached 65 in the history of the world are alive today?
4%
What percent of the population of the US was 65+ in 1900?
Symbolic interactionism
What sociological perspective stresses that age has no inherent meaning and that each culture shapes the way that its citizens perceive the elderly?
47
What was the life expectancy in the years 1900-1906?
Probably 30 years shorter than it is now
What was the life expectancy when ACU began?
Elder abuse
When a caretaker intentionally deprives an older person of care or harms the person in their charge
Speaking slowly and loudly when talking to someone over the age of 65
Which action reflects ageism?
Men who remain active after retirement play supportive community roles
Which assertion about aging in men would be made by a sociologist following the functionalist perspective?
Being frail to the point of dependency on care
Which factor most increases the risk of an elderly person suffering mistreatment?
Functionalism
Which of the three major sociological theoretical perspectives is most closely aligned with the disengagement, activity, and continuity theories of aging?
The conflict perspective
Which sociological perspective is most closely aligned with the explanation that social security benefits came about as the result of a struggle between competing interest groups?