Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length. / Lassen, Aske Juul.

2013. Abstract fra Transformations of health practices and health policies in the Nordic Welfare States, Copenhagen.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lassen, AJ 2013, 'Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length', Transformations of health practices and health policies in the Nordic Welfare States, Copenhagen, 24/04/2013 - 25/04/2013.

APA

Lassen, A. J. (Accepteret/In press). Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length. Abstract fra Transformations of health practices and health policies in the Nordic Welfare States, Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Lassen AJ. Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length. 2013. Abstract fra Transformations of health practices and health policies in the Nordic Welfare States, Copenhagen.

Author

Lassen, Aske Juul. / Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length. Abstract fra Transformations of health practices and health policies in the Nordic Welfare States, Copenhagen.

Bibtex

@conference{192bcef490254bd3b641b965b48444a1,
title = "Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm{\textquoteright}s length",
abstract = "Active ageing has increasingly become the ideal of how to live later life. Concepts of activity, participation and independence are central to how elderly see themselves and practice aging (Katz 2000). The elderly are encouraged and expected to stay active and independent. This is believed to be good for their quality of life, health, functionality and the economy (Sundhedsstyrelsen 2008, EC 2006, WHO 2002).At the same time active aging is inscribed into a general health care focus, which individualizes the responsibility for health and disease. This requires subjects ready to self-care, by paying attention to the signals of the body and leading healthy lives (Rose 2001). However, active aging seems to contain an ambiguity in this aspect, as the practice of active aging is often a way for elderly to keep diseases at arm{\textquoteright}s length, and not a way to sense the possible abnormalities in the body. Through ethnographic fieldwork at two activity centres, the author has studied the role of activity and practice of active aging in the everyday live of the elderly users of the centres. There seems to be a fundamental difference between how active aging is thought of at policy level – as a part of a health regime of prevention and sensing the body - and how these elderly use activities to distance the sensations of the body. Activity in this way becomes a way to maintain disease at arms length.",
author = "Lassen, {Aske Juul}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 24-04-2013 Through 25-04-2013",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Active aging as a way of keeping diseases at arm’s length

AU - Lassen, Aske Juul

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Active ageing has increasingly become the ideal of how to live later life. Concepts of activity, participation and independence are central to how elderly see themselves and practice aging (Katz 2000). The elderly are encouraged and expected to stay active and independent. This is believed to be good for their quality of life, health, functionality and the economy (Sundhedsstyrelsen 2008, EC 2006, WHO 2002).At the same time active aging is inscribed into a general health care focus, which individualizes the responsibility for health and disease. This requires subjects ready to self-care, by paying attention to the signals of the body and leading healthy lives (Rose 2001). However, active aging seems to contain an ambiguity in this aspect, as the practice of active aging is often a way for elderly to keep diseases at arm’s length, and not a way to sense the possible abnormalities in the body. Through ethnographic fieldwork at two activity centres, the author has studied the role of activity and practice of active aging in the everyday live of the elderly users of the centres. There seems to be a fundamental difference between how active aging is thought of at policy level – as a part of a health regime of prevention and sensing the body - and how these elderly use activities to distance the sensations of the body. Activity in this way becomes a way to maintain disease at arms length.

AB - Active ageing has increasingly become the ideal of how to live later life. Concepts of activity, participation and independence are central to how elderly see themselves and practice aging (Katz 2000). The elderly are encouraged and expected to stay active and independent. This is believed to be good for their quality of life, health, functionality and the economy (Sundhedsstyrelsen 2008, EC 2006, WHO 2002).At the same time active aging is inscribed into a general health care focus, which individualizes the responsibility for health and disease. This requires subjects ready to self-care, by paying attention to the signals of the body and leading healthy lives (Rose 2001). However, active aging seems to contain an ambiguity in this aspect, as the practice of active aging is often a way for elderly to keep diseases at arm’s length, and not a way to sense the possible abnormalities in the body. Through ethnographic fieldwork at two activity centres, the author has studied the role of activity and practice of active aging in the everyday live of the elderly users of the centres. There seems to be a fundamental difference between how active aging is thought of at policy level – as a part of a health regime of prevention and sensing the body - and how these elderly use activities to distance the sensations of the body. Activity in this way becomes a way to maintain disease at arms length.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 24 April 2013 through 25 April 2013

ER -

ID: 44385314