Healthy Aging
Work/Leisure
Grief/Bereavement
Relationships
MISC
100

Emphasizes factors that promote health and longevity, rather than factors that cause disease.

Salutogenesis

100

Individuals that usually work with new hires and help facilitate on-the-job learning.

Mentor

100

Kubler Ross' stages

Denial/isolation

Anger

Bargaining

Depression

Acceptance

100

Staying with a partner through life's good and bad times.

Commitment

100

The degree to which people are similar

Homogamy

200

Rowe & Kahn's (1997) components of healthy aging.

1. Avoiding disease/disability

2. Maintaining high physical/cognitive functioning

3. Remaining engaged with life


200

Retirement became popular after this historical event.

World War 2

200

Ways that people protect themselves when thinking about death. For example, a belief in an afterlife, making jokes, etc.

Terror Management Theory

200

Successful relationships exist when both partners believe there is equity in the relationship. Greg does the vacuuming and his wife does the laundry. They both share in childcare responsibilities.

Exchange theory

200

Grief that occurs before the loss of a loved one. For example, family coping with the dementia diagnosis their loved one has received.

anticipatory grief

300

These clear out the low-density lipoproteins that clog up arteries.

High-density lipoproteins (HDLs).

300
Your personal library of activities and hobbies that you continue to do even after you retire.

Leisure repertoire

300

Affective or emotional response to bereavement.

Grief

300

Failing to take care of an older adult who you are responsible for (e.g., making sure they are dressed, fed, etc).

Neglect

300

Preoccupation with a deceased individual to a point that it interferes with daily functioning.

Separation Distress

400

Efforts aimed at improving functional abilities of people with chronic conditions. Ex) occupational therapy for someone with a stroke

Quaternary prevention

400

Internal urge to engage in an activity, making it hard to disengage with it, and leading to conflict with other aspects of one's daily life.

Obsessive passion

400

This model of coping allows for the experience of simultaneous positive and negative emotions.

Model of Adapting Grieving Dynamics (MAGD)

400

Feeling as though our relationships are resources that we can use.

Social Baseline Theory

400

People have the right to make their own healthcare decisions, accept/refuse medical treatment, and make an advance healthcare directive

Patient self-determination act of 1990

500
Meg is 70 years old. She is aware of stereotypes regarding memory as we age. Because she believes her memory is going to decline anyways, she does not attempt to remember items in her grocery list when she forgets it. Her daughter then believes that Meg is losing her memory.

Social Facilitation of the Nonuse of Competence.

500

People choose jobs that optimize the fit between their traits and occupational interests. For example, someone who enjoys working with other people may choose to go into social work.

Holland's personality-type theory

500

A significant loss to you, but not always accepted or validated by others because of societal norms.

Disenfranchised grief

500

Explains changes in motivations and goals as we age; older adults place greater emphasis on emotionally meaningful relationships.

Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (SST)

500

Death is deliberately induced, such as receiving a lethal dose of a drug.

Active euthanasia