Physical Abilities of the Aging
After our youth and active adulthood, each of us experiences a gradual
decline in physical strength, flexibility, dexterity, and endurance. A variety
of conditions contribute to this natural aging process. Our concern is with the
physical losses that can create difficulties in daily living.
Body
No two persons age the same. Some will have vision and/or hearing losses
while others might suffer from decreased physical abilities. Some of these
conditions are described below, along with suggestions that can help compensate
for physical and functional limitations.
Vision Loss
Older people have a higher rate of blindness than any other age group. Among
those 85 years and older, one of 20 persons is legally blind. Changes in vision
accelerate after age 50 and in crease in severity after age 65. It can become
more difficult for older persons to see objects clearly. The lens of the eye can
become opaque and yellow, affecting its ability to discern closely related
colors, especially in the blue-green end of the color spectrum.
It takes longer for an older person's eyes to change focus from an object
close at hand to another farther away. And it takes longer for them to focus
when they move from light to dark areas or vice versa. During these intervals,
they may not be able to see hazards such as steps or furniture.
Fortunately, visual impairments and blindness are not always the severely
handicapping conditions they are commonly imagined to be. Visually-impaired
people can adapt successfully to most environmental circumstances, especially
familiar spaces such as their own homes.
If you or members of your household are visually impaired:
- Clearly mark (with white or reflecting tape) hazardous changes in floor
levels.
- Position furniture away from areas where you walk or move about most
often.
- Adjust the illumination throughout your home. Use higher wattage light
bulbs where appropriate. Distribute the light evenly and avoid using shiny
surfaces, to help minimize glare.
- Become aware of your home's color scheme. Yellow-oranges and reds are more
easily distinguished by older adults.
- Avoid using closely related colors together. Instead, use contrasting
colors between places like doorways and walls, dishes and tablecloths, and
the risers and flat surfaces of steps.
- Keep a consistent light level in both bedrooms and hallways and remember
to use night lights.
Hearing Loss
Hearing loss is the most common disability among older persons. As people age,
they generally lose inner ear bone conductivity and/or nerve sensitivity.
Hearing ability, especially in the higher frequencies, declines gradually.
Background noises interfere with ability to hear a normal conversation, and
people with hearing loss may be considered inattentive and withdraw from social
participation.
A profoundly deaf person often cannot use telephones and often must travel to
relay messages. Teletypewriters (TTYS) can greatly increase communication
between hearing-impaired people, their families and friends. These machines type
out telephone messages that can be picked up by another similar machine. People
with less dramatic hearing loss can use amplified handsets or have an extension
bell installed on their telephone.
Appropriate emergency communication systems are critical for deaf people.
Audible warning signals should be accompanied by visual warning systems or
vibration devices. To insure your own comfort and safety:
- For easier communication, it is helpful to be in the quietest corner of a
room or in a side room away from group noises.
- Position yourself where you can easily hear a conversation.
- Carpet the floors and put curtains in the windows, to reduce sharp noises
and distracting echoes.
- If necessary, purchase special electronic devices such as hearing aids,
vibrating alarm clocks, and an amplified TV set or flashing lights to
announce information and warnings.
- Contact your telephone company for amplified handsets, signal devices,
TTYs and extension bells. Ask for their special needs department.
Hand Limitations
Arthritis is a common disability among older persons. This malady can cause
painful degeneration of the joints, and severely restrict mobility. For people
with arthritis or other dexterity-limiting conditions, operating controls and
switches, gripping objects such as door knobs, and using tools are the chief
problems.
If arthritis affects anyone in your household, you may want to install large
levertype controls on faucets, door latches, and appliance knobs. You can easily
modify an existing knob control by fitting a rubber furniture leg tip over the
control and inserting a small wooden dowel through it to create a lever arm. To
determine whether or not a control can be used by a person with a dexterity
problem, try the following "rule of thumb":
If an able-bodied person can operate the control with his or her fist closed,
then almost anyone, regardless of hand disability, will be able to operate the
control.
Range of Reach 
A person in a chair or wheelchair is limited to a maximum side reach of 54"
and a maximum frontal reach of 48". The lowest easy reach from a seated
position is approximately 9" to the side and 12" to the front.
A standing person has a very different range of reach. When you undertake any
home changes, remember to consider these differences.
Frailty, Disorientation and Dizziness
Many older persons experience occasional dizziness, but a chronic condition
resulting in disorientation, constant dizziness or frailty can cause familiar
environments to become hostile. If a member of your household displays any of
these symptoms, try to make your home as safe and easily-perceived as possible.
The following suggestions might prove helpful:
- Use furnishings that are stable and without sharp corners to minimize the
effects of a fall.
- Make the environment safe by removing scatter rugs, sharp objects and
clutter but keep the layout of familiar furniture and pathways the same.
- You may also want to consider placing barriers at dangerous locations to
prevent unstable or disoriented members of your household from inadvertently
falling down stairs or entering unfamiliar rooms where hazards are present.
Mobility Impairments
Walking from one place to another and going up and down steps can be extremely
difficult for people with limited mobility. For those with heart disorders,
these activities can be particularly hazardous.
You can overcome these problems by relocating bedrooms or living spaces onto
the same level, by establishing convenient storage areas, and by removing
hazards on paths between commonly used rooms in your home. Try to conserve
energy by climbing stairs only when necessary and by storing frequently used
household items where they can be retrieved with a minimum of bending, reaching,
lifting, and carrying.
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