60, Not 50, Is The New Middle Age, Study Says

rockin'robin

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
24,431
Reaction score
546
Dreading the big 5-0? Fear not. A new study says that 60 -- not 50 -- is the new middle-aged.

Researchers from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis and Stony Brook University say we've been thinking about old age all wrong, and that age is more than just the number of years you've been roaming the Earth.

"Age can be measured as the time already lived or it can be adjusted taking into account the time left to live," the study's lead author, the IIASA's Sergei Scherbov said in a release. Someone who is 60-years-old today, I would argue is middle-aged. Two hundred years ago, a 60-year-old would be a very old person."

The researchers used projections of Europe's population until the year 2050 to look at how an increasing life expectancy changes the definition of "old." They used different rates of increases, ranging from a stagnant life expectancy to one which grew 1.4 years per decade, to look at the portion of the population who was considered to be old. They looked at both the conventional definition, which considers people over age 65 old, and a new measure, which advances the threshold for old age as overall life expectancy grows.

The findings, published in the journal PLOS ONE, say that as the life expectancy increased with the new measure of old age, the proportion of older people in the population continually fell. The researchers say that we must adjust the threshold we use to determine old age, otherwise the proportion of older people will grow as life expectancy increases.

The findings, published in the journal PLOS ONE, say that as the life expectancy increased with the new measure of old age, the proportion of older people in the population continually fell. The researchers say that we must adjust the threshold we use to determine old age, otherwise the proportion of older people will grow as life expectancy increases.

"What we think of as old has changed over time, and it will need to continue changing in the future as people live longer, healthier lives," Scherbov said.

It's especially important as Americans are living longer than ever. A 2014 survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that in 2012, the U.S. life expectancy reached a record high of 78.8 years. The expectancy was higher for women than men; they also reported that death rates have fallen 1.1 percent since 2011.

Time to rethink aging.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/16/60-is-the-new-middle-age_n_7079006.html
 
Interesting. i have friends who are 50s that i dont see them like 50s at all. They do keep their life very activie.. Guess so!

Last winter, my instructor ski, and we all went to SKI to the GORE resort, Greek Resort, and few resorts. We even had dinner. I kept forgetting that he's 72.. jeez!
 
I disagree. 50-65 is Middle age. I cant even collect Social Security yet. I agree with Chris Rock though. The government should lower the retirement age to 55
 
I disagree. 50-65 is Middle age. I cant even collect Social Security yet. I agree with Chris Rock though. The government should lower the retirement age to 55

do you realize that since people are living much longer than before... Social Security would collapse if the retirement age is reduced to 55?

55 years old people nowadays are very capable and able-bodied. don't be a lazy ass and get off the couch.
 
:lol: (at Jiro)...at 68 and soon to be 69, I'm still kicking and doing everything I used to do...only a little slower....when I was 60...still rocking and rolling...I'm still doing it...just taking a nap in between. :giggle:
 
I disagree-- the retirement age should not be lowered partly because of what jiro said and partly because there are MANY who are in their 40s/50s who don't have a solid (or can't have one) retirement plan. Working is sometimes better than Social Security because SS/SSI/SSDI is a fraction of whatever you put into or made in your working life.

I'd rather be working if I can than be on SSDI...
 
yea at 55 and 65 years old... you'll see me doing this -

[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBp0sGOKbY0[/ame]
 
Back
Top