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People with relatively extreme opinions may be more willing to publicly share their views than those with more moderate views, according to a new study.

The key is that the extremists have to believe that more people share their views than actually do, the research found.


Social and Political Repercussions

The results may offer one possible explanation for our fractured political climate in the United States, where extreme liberal and conservative opinions often seem to dominate.

"When people with extreme views have this false sense that they are in the majority, they are more willing to express themselves," said Kimberly Rios Morrison, co-author of the study and assistant professor of communication at Ohio State University.

Group Dynamics on Viewpoints

How do people with extreme views believe they are in the majority? This can happen in groups that tend to lean moderately in one direction on an issue. Those that take the extreme version of their group's viewpoint may believe that they actually represent the true views of their group, Morrison said.

One example is views about alcohol use among college students.

In a series of studies, Morrison and her co-author found that college students who were extremely pro-alcohol were more likely to express their opinions than others, even though most students surveyed were moderate in their views about alcohol use.

"Students who were stridently pro-alcohol tended to think that their opinion was much more popular than it actually was," she said. "They seemed to buy into the stereotype that college students are very comfortable with alcohol use."

The average student's views were near the mid-point of the scale -- but most rated the typical Stanford student as more pro-alcohol than themselves.

"There's this stereotype that college students are very pro-alcohol, and even most college students believe it," Morrison said. "Most students think of themselves as less pro-alcohol than average."

Morrison conducted this study with Dale Miller of Stanford University. Their research appeared in a recent issue of the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.


In the next two studies, students again rated themselves on similar scales that revealed how pro-alcohol they were. They were then asked how willing they would be to discuss their views on alcohol use with other Stanford students.

Change Advocacy?

In general, students who were the most pro-alcohol were the most likely to say they wanted to express their views, compared to those with moderate or anti-alcohol views.

However, in one study the researchers added a twist: they gave participants fake data which indicated that other Stanford students held relatively conservative, anti-alcohol views.

Willing to Stick Your Neck Out?

When extremely pro-alcohol students viewed this data, they were less likely to say they were willing to discuss alcohol usage with their fellow students.

"It is only when they have this sense that they are in the majority that extremely pro-alcohol students are more willing to express their views on the issue," Morrison said.

However, students who had more extreme anti-alcohol views were not more likely to want to express their views, even when they saw the data that suggested a majority of their fellow students agreed with them.

"Their views that they are in the minority may be so deeply entrenched that it is difficult to change just based on our one experiment," she said. "In addition, they don't have the experience expressing their opinions on the subject like the pro-alcohol extremists do, so they may not feel as comfortable."

Extreme Versions of the Group's Actual Views

This finding shows that not all extremists are more willing to share their opinions - only those who hold more extreme versions of the group's actual views.

These results have implications for how Americans view the political opinions of their communities and their political parties, Morrison said.

Take as an example a community that tends to be moderate politically, but leans slightly liberal.

People with more extreme liberal views in the community may be more likely than others to attend publicly visible protests and display bumper stickers espousing their liberal views, because they think the community supports them.

"Everyone else sees these extreme opinions being expressed on a regular basis and they may eventually come to believe their community is more liberal than it actually is," Morrison said. "The same process could occur in moderately conservative communities.

The Social Change Process

"You have a cycle that feeds on itself: the more you hear these extremists expressing their opinions, the more you are going to believe that those extreme beliefs are normal for your community."

A similar process may occur in groups such as political parties. Moderately conservative people who belong to the Republican Party, for example, may believe that people with extremely conservative views represent their party, because those are the opinions they hear most often. However, that may not be true.

The Silent Majority...the Vocal Minority

Morrison said when she and her colleagues were thinking about doing this study, they had in mind the phrase about the "silent majority" in the United States, which was popularized by President Richard Nixon and his vice-president, Spiro Agnew. They referred to the silent majority as the people who supported the war in Vietnam, but who were overshadowed by the "vocal minority" against the war.

While there may not be one monolithic silent majority in the United States, Morrison said this study suggests that the minority may indeed be more vocal in some cases.

Source: Newswise

We're the village who must rear our children better.  The statistics about the well-being of our children are astounding, and as older family, neighbors, volunteers, and care takers, we can do something about this disaster.

"The population under 18 in the United States is both the poorest and most culturally diverse part of our society," cultural anthropologist and psychologist Richard Shweder,   said. "Among that group, 42 percent are members of racial and ethnic minorities and about half of those are the children of immigrants." "Dealing with the issue of diversity is important for everyone."

Whether a parent or a professional caregiver, anyone who has cared for children is likely to have dozens of questions about their development.

With the intent of providing up-to-date information on the medical, psychological, educational and legal issues related to children and their development, a leading group of scholars has created The Child: An Encyclopedia Companion.

Drawing from a variety of disciplines, the contributing authors crafted the 529 entries that make up this nearly 1,200-page reference volume. The Editor-in-Chief of this decade-long project is the cultural anthropologist and psychologist Richard Shweder, who leads research on human development at the University of Chicago.

Articles in The Child cover birth through adolescence, and 41 supplemental essays provide readers with additional insights on subjects related to development, such as how children view race and how different cultures prepare children to enter adulthood.

Multicultural Approach

The multicultural approach is intended for parents and professionals to gain a deeper understanding of the meaning of childhood in the United States and around the world.

This single volume, A-Z reference book might be described as "everything you ever wanted to know about children and childhood but never even thought to ask - the coverage is meant to be authoritative, balanced, humane and eye-opening, and the book is even fun to read." said Shweder, the William Claude Reavis Distinguished Service Professor in Comparative Human Development at the University.

The University of Chicago Press published The Child, which Shweder describes as a current, informative reference on topics from children's religious rights, toilet training and reproductive technologies, to family rituals, respiratory diseases or understanding how children learn.

The book also looks at the cultural, historical and legal aspects of childhood, as well as the symbolic worlds of language and literature that are most relevant to children.

It Takes a Village...

"There has been a general tendency for the state to take more responsibility for the care of children. The world has become more child-focused," Shweder pointed out. Issues of child abuse become particularly important for policy-makers trying to decide how to craft laws in the best interest of the child. In 16 countries, that eagerness has led to laws that protect children from spankings by parents. Nevertheless, even as the world globalizes, great diversity continues to exist in family life norms and ideals for "normal" child development.

Adoption is another area in which cultural and legal issues arise. In some cultures, individuals other than the biological parents raise the children within those societies. By contrast, U.S. laws governing adoption are strict, and Americans' understanding of what constitutes a family has changed; more international adoptions take place and people create family units in which the members don't all look alike, the book points out.

While open-minded about the various ways that many issues in growing up can be experienced, the encyclopedia also aims to enable readers to evaluate and contextualize what they learn from medical, psychological and legal professionals and to make more informed uses of their services. For example, some parents have shunned vaccinations and fear they are a possible cause of autism. The book notes: "Several studies, many professional panels, and even congressional hearings in the United States and Europe have definitely ruled out any association between the two."

Other research in the encyclopedia provides data on how popular music lyrics and video games affect children, pointing to studies that show music lyrics are not as harmful to children as violent video games might be.

In The Child, authoritative and balanced summaries of knowledge about childhood complement information on issues related to policy.

The diversity of America's child-age population plays a big role in understanding the needed response, Shweder points out.

Source: Newswise


The California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) praised the National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) for their study that shows defined benefit plans play a critical role in reducing the risk of poverty and hardship among older Americans.

In the NIRS report -- The Pension Factor: Assessing the Role of Defined Benefit Plans in Reducing Elder Hardships - said that pension income among Americans in 2006 helped avoid nearly $7.3 billion in public assistance expenditures and kept 4.7 million households out of poverty or near poverty.

"This study validates what we have always known, defined benefit plans like CalPERS significantly contribute to society and our economy every day," said Anne Stausboll, Chief Executive Officer.  "Pensions protect Americans, especially the elderly, from poverty, material hardships and reliance on public assistance."

The Pension Factor finds that pension income among older American households can be attributed to 1.7 million fewer poor households and 2.9 million fewer near poor households; 560,000 fewer households experiencing a food hardship; and 320,000 fewer households struggling with health care, among other contributions.  A copy of the report can be found on the NIRS Web site at www.nirsonline.org.

CalPERS is the nation's largest public pension fund with assets of more than $187 billion.  It administers retirement benefits for 1.6 million active and retired State, public school, and local public agency employees and their families and health benefits for 1.3 million members. 
NAHC takes the lead on addressing housing crisis
The NAHC board, during its October meeting, approved a policy of encouraging cooperative homeownership as a better way to deal with large-scale single-family foreclosure disasters. Properly established membership cooperatives have a good record of acquiring, owning and operating distressed properties, including single-family homes, on a continuing and more affordable basis.

"A Cooperative Solution," by the NAHC legislative committee
Established in 1960, NAHC and its 10 regional associations provide education, inspiration and service to housing cooperatives with well over a million families. NAHC's Board of Directors at its September 2008 meeting unanimously supported a cooperative approach to affordable housing ownership and preservation of individually owned houses faced with foreclosures.

Basic premises: Housing cooperatives provide cooperative homeownership at significantly lower cost, especially for families of low and moderate income.

Membership in NAHC offers networking, technical assistance, legislative representation, education, cooperative information and much more for the housing cooperative community. 

National Association of Housing Cooperatives
1614 King St.,
Alexandria, VA 22314
(703) 549-5201

The leading housing and community development advocate for the provision of adequate and affordable housing and strong, viable communities for all Americans particularly those for low - and moderate- incomes.

 
How would you like a coffeehouse or snack bar named for you? 

Vitalize! Wellness Centre, is a state‐of‐the‐art development that opened as part of the Ecumen community Parmly LifePointes in Chicago City, called Ruben's, named for a 94‐year‐old resident, and lifetime swimmer.  Being active in a local community brings many rewards...and a great community will use its own facilities to acknowledge achievements and inspiring people to further their mission -- including naming facilities after key residents!

The Vitalize! Wellness Centre,  features a warm‐water pool, juicing classes and rows of high‐tech exercise machines that boost a goal of helping residents to seize personal responsibility for "aging well." Ruben Berg is a prime example of that accomplishment, says Patricia Montgomery, the center's director.

She defines aging well as "live long, die short."

A 1998 book titled "Successful Aging," based on results of the groundbreaking MacArthur Foundation Study, taught us the powerful role each of us has in shaping our health and well‐being as we age.

Our genes determine only 30% of our destiny! 
The other 70 percent is up to us!
A decade after the book was published, other studies have confirmed and advanced those findings.

Most people can recite the wisdom of regular exercise, keeping weight within limits and that smoking is bad for your health, says Robert Kahn, co‐author of "Successful Aging"

He sees progress in Americans' understanding of aging well, he says. But it shows up more in what they know than what they do.  Like obesity -- it's increasing rather than decreasing.

Kahn sees too little about why people are living longer and what longer life means, he adds. "Or what a longer and productive and happy life can be."

He wants to see more information circulated about other findings, too, such as the need to challenge our brains often and in new ways to stay mentally sharp. And he'd like to see more about learning and productivity in older people's lives and less about leisure.

We get the hint :-)  So in this blog ... "Solutions for Senior Health" we're focusing on learning and productivity and healthful living!  Good behavior!

Dr. Roger Landry travels the country to educate audiences about aging well and to promote and train care providers in the how‐to of masterpiece living, a plan for successful living inspired by the MacArthur Foundation Study.

Questions remain about how to make it happen. "One is how to engage older adults. They're smart people with interesting lives." But our broader society tends to push them aside. Changing that, he says, would be a "win‐win" for people of every age.


IDEAS:  crossword puzzles and Sudoko and software such as  [m]Power cognitive fitness technology

Spirituality and Social Connectedness -- Solution for Isolation

Understanding of the value of both spirituality and social connectedness is growing, he says. "If we stay in our homes, almost by definition we stay more and 3
more isolated." Studies show that isolation heightens the risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, dementia, falling and fractures.

"Alzheimer's disease still terrifies people," Landry says, and many aren't aware there are ways to ward it off.

Americans need to replace high levels of stress, which he calls "our national sickness," with more serenity and soulfulness.

States Are Developing Senior Communities

Cleveland (Ohio) Foundation Successful Aging Initiative (http://www.successfulaging.org), which is developing a three‐year, $4 million plan to create and maintain elder‐friendly communities in the city. Goals include creating lifelong learning and development centers and promoting employment and volunteer opportunities for older people.

Colorado,  (www.silverprintcolorado.org) is developing an independent coalition of individuals, organizations and businesses with a vision  to establish a culture for positive aging and addressing needs, contributions and opportunities for people age 60‐plus.

6 Dimensions of Wellness
  • physical
  • emotional
  • intellectual
  • social
  • vocational
  • spiritual

The hope is that individuals will hold onto an independent spirit. That can mean living one's passion, whether it's a long‐held one, something they've always wanted to try or a new discovery.

SOURCE:  Ecumen, "Senior Housing and Successful Aging in the 21st Century"

Technology That Transforms Senior Services

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Over the last decade technology has created a whole new world - but it has largely been  geared to the young. Computer games. Camera phones. Reality TV.  But technology always seeks new market niches, especially those with scale -- and the Baby Boomer generation is bringing about that marketing nirvana.  Boomers love technology...and they are going to need practical applications of technology to help them live independently and cost effectively.

Technology is both helpful and fun -- "It's fun."  "And challenging,"

Leaders in the aging services field say introducing new technology is much more than a smart business move. They call it a must.

  • Touch‐screen computers
  • Software to test - and polish -  mental skills.
      Example:  The program by Dakim called (m)Power "It helps us keep our brains active."

Andrew Carle, nationally known for coining the term "nana technology" to identify innovations that improve seniors' quality of life. "They're not optional. They're mandatory," says Carle, who managed hospitals and senior housing before joining the faculty at George Mason University, where he directs a program in assisted living/senior housing administration.

Technologies that help provide care and well‐being will be essential as people live longer and a huge baby boom generation - those born between 1946 and 1964 - edges into retirement and later life, he says.

By 2030, 1 of every 5 people in the United States will be 65 or older, compared to 12 percent in that age group now.

And by 2050, there will be more than a million people over age 100.

"We have to have technology to help seniors live independently, or to allow one's caregiver to be as productive as three or four are today," he says. "Or we're not going to have enough professional caregivers."

Eric Dishman, general manager for health, research and innovation for the California‐based Intel Corp., backs up Carle's theory.

Dr. Michael Magee, son of a house‐call‐making doctor and director of the Pfizer Medical Humanities Initiative, frames the challenge this way: "how to increase services for three times (3X)  as many seniors while reducing health‐care costs."

Technology is at the core of the solution, say Dishman and Magee in a video created for the Center for Aging Services Technology (CAST). In "Transforming an Aging Nation" (www.agingtech.org/index.aspx) and a companion video on the Web site, they share a look at one of many ways technology can bring efficiency to aging services.

The "new caregiver model"

What are some of these assistive technologies for seniors?

  • Online games of solitaire and poker help seniors exercise their minds.
  • A high‐tech watch reminds you to take  medications,
  • Sensors turn off the burners on the stove if forgotten.
  • Medical information is digitally recorded so any doctor has immediate access to it.
  • A "reality family TV" monitor in the home allows two‐way communication with family members

Specific Senior Health Care Technologies Marry Information and Access

Health care always benefits from good information -- easily accessible at the right time.  And technology is capturing that information and making it readily available.

A Portable Health Profile on a miniature CD and tiny flash drive made by Critical Access  stores all sorts of medical records including X‐rays.

Many diabetics now carry cell phones that can analyze a strip of blood within seconds and send results to their doctors' offices.

Intel is researching how new technology can bring three pieces together: cell phones, inexpensive sensors that capture biological data and the infrastructure of health care.

Good decision‐making requires good information.

In Ecumen's senior housing communities, technology reduces doctor visits with a device called Invivi Soft Pulse that uses electromagnetic frequencies to minimize the pain of wounds from injuries or skin breakdown - a common condition as people age ‐‐ and help them heal.

A system called CareTracker makes recordkeeping and other "paperwork" more efficient, freeing up additional time for nurses and aides to deal directly with residents.

"Magic floors," are being developed in which sensors in a layer of carpet can track footstep patterns and detect changes in a person's gait that warn of potential falls.

Plastic pill cases are being designed to remind people when to take their pills. Sensors on a pill bottle alert someone that they are taking the wrong pill or taking a pill at the wrong time.

Ecumen residents barely notice the seven pocket‐flashlight sized motion sensors tucked in seven strategic places in residents' kitchen, living room, bedroom and bathroom to monitor  movement in the apartment. They're at the heart of a system called QuietCare  to detect longer‐than‐normal time spent in bed or the bathroom, which can signal something is wrong.

Technology for Seniors Goes Beyond Physical Health

Internet entrepreneurs are "dabbling in" a new twist on Web sites popular with teenagers. Sites like Eons, Razoom, Multiply and Boomertown help older adults stay connected from anywhere.

ABOUT the reference author:  Kay Harvey writes for Eldr Magazine and reports on aging, demographics, gender and psychology for the online newspaper MinnPost.com.


"The sheer numbers of my generation dominate a fast approaching, unprecedented demographic transformation in this country and in Minnesota. By 2020 we will have more seniors in our state than children," says Kathryn Roberts, CEO and President, Ecumen, an ELCA Lutheran organization that provides development of senior housing. Ecumen's "Baby Boomer" age studies have found the following:

Most want to:

  • Live at home, not in institutions.
  • Live in communities close to a wide variety of amenities.
  • Participate in the payment of their care costs.
  • Have more options for paying for that care.
  • Do some type of work in retirement.
  • Positively impact a community's life.
  • Volunteer.
  • Use technology.
  • Have public policies that help them live where they want to live.

Who are these Baby Boomers?

  • 67% of baby boomers plan to volunteer during retirement
  • 65% believe thei can have an impact on a community's quality of life
  • 69% of baby boomers don't plan to retire until they are 65 or older. 14% anticipate working past age 70.
  • 46% say they will have a full or part time job in retirement.
  • 73% of those who plan to work in retirement say their job will be different from their current job. 93% say they think it's likely they'll find a job they enjoy.

Choices

Boomers desire choices that help them live where they want to live, how they want to live -- independence, personalization, ease, choice, convenience, and wellness. Their desire for change and choice will not abate with time. It's not just a boomer desire, it's a human desire.

Age-specific

Many of the products for seniors today are built on what a younger generation assumes that seniors need, not what they actually want. This paternalistic approach keeps ageist assumptions alive, such as what we often see in today's advertising. In so many people's eyes, if you're old, you're invisible. Boomers are telling us they won't be invisible. We must focus on people's wants, not just their needs.

Long Term Care Insurance

Many baby boomers don't understand long-term care insurance. In fact, many of them dislike the name "longterm care." One insurance company changed the name of its product from long-term care to "total living coverage" and features centenarians in their marketing who are living the life they envisioned because they planned for it earlier in life.

Technology

Technology - from the internet to the iPod - is ubiquitous in boomers' lives. That's not decreasing. Boomers are telling us that they love technology and see it as a tool that will help them stay independent.
  • Nearly 9 out of 10 boomers (85%) use the internet. -- Email, research and 71% use the internet at home!
  • More than 62% plan to purchase a computer for internet access in the next year.
  • 92% anticipate that technology will help them live longer and more independently.
  • 95% of boomers want a central sate website where consumers can obtain unbiased consumer information and shopping for LTC insurance products.
European countries, Japan and South Korea are encouraging U.S. companies - through benefits and less bureaucratic environments - to set up research and development outside the United States. The global aging services market has been estimated to be as high as $140 billion dollars.

Find the complete report on Ecumen's Baby Boomer research at their website.

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