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      Aging, natural death, and the compression of morbidity.

      The New England journal of medicine
      Acute Disease, epidemiology, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aging, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, mortality, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Life Expectancy, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Biological, Morbidity, Mortality, Quality of Life, United States

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          Abstract

          The average length of life has risen from 47 to 73 years in this century, but the maximum life span has not increased. Therefore, survival curves have assumed an ever more rectangular form. Eighty per cent of the years of life lost to nontraumatic, premature death have been eliminated, and most premature deaths are now due to the chronic diseases of the later years. Present data allow calculation of the ideal average life span, approximately 85 years. Chronic illness may presumably be postponed by changes in life style, and it has been shown that the physiologic and psychologic markers of aging may be modified. Thus, the average age at first infirmity can be raised, thereby making the morbidity curve more rectangular. Extension of adult vigor far into a fixed life span compresses the period of senescence near the end of life. Health-research strategies to improve the quality of life require careful study of the variability of the phenomena of aging and how they may be modified.

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          Long-term effects of a control-relevant intervention with the institutionalized aged.

          Elderly nursing home residents who were tested as part of an intervention designed to increase feelings of choice and personal responsibility over daily events were reevaluated 18 month later. Nurses' ratings and health and mortality indicators suggest that the experimental treatment and /or the processes that it set in motion had sustained beneficial effects.
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            General theory of mortality and aging.

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              On the plasticity of intelligence in adulthood and old age: where Horn and Donaldson fail.

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