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Nature is ageist.


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2020 May 2, 6:17am   1,047 views  10 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

Europe is starting to lift coronavirus restrictions. But might seniors be left out?

BERLIN — Some have been cut off from active social lives. Others miss the checkout line conversations that were their only social outlet. They call to talk about the weather, or to ask how long the lockdown will continue, or sometimes just to cry.

Silbernetz, a Berlin-based hotline that offers to listen to and support seniors, has had a fivefold spike in calls during the novel coronavirus outbreak, which has brought new levels of social isolation. Volunteers answer about 120 calls a day.

“Loneliness is enveloping everyone,” said Elke Schilling, 75, who started the hotline and takes calls herself. “They feel their walls are imploding in on them.”
People may find some solidarity in their loneliness right now, with so many around the world obliged to stay home. But forced isolation has hit elderly populations especially hard.

And the disparity may become even more pronounced as countries begin to send children back to school, and the young and healthy back to work, while debating whether to require or advise older, more vulnerable citizens to remain at home.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a recent interview that the elderly may have to remain largely isolated through the end of the year. “Without a vaccine, we have to limit as much as possible contact with the elderly,” she told the Bild newspaper, adding: “Children and young people will enjoy more freedom of movement earlier than elderly people and those with preexisting medical conditions.”

Top officials in Europe are struggling to balance competing concerns — figuring out how to protect those who are older and most susceptible to deadly cases of the coronavirus, without consigning them to endless months of isolation.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has indicated that as society reopens in Germany — a country with one of the world’s oldest populations — she’s against excluding the elderly as a group. She is leaning on a study by Germany’s National Academy of Sciences, the Leopoldina, that warns against segregating specific groups for “their own protection” due to the psychological impacts of “infantilizing” them.

In Britain, older citizens have already been singled out. In March, before the country went into wider lockdown, the government asked people over 70 to stay home for four months. Advocacy groups are concerned that restrictions on the elderly will remain after most of Britain’s lockdown has been lifted.
France, meanwhile, is trying to alleviate the isolation of its seniors by easing a ban on nursing home visits. But Prime Minister Édouard Philippe, laying out France’s “deconfinement” plan this week, suggested that people over 65 may want to continue to limit their social contacts after measures for other citizens are lifted on May 11.

It may not matter to some seniors if their government has given them explicit orders or guidance to continue isolating. With greater susceptibility to the virus, older people may need longer to trust that it’s okay to resume socializing in person.

Still, Mazda Adli, chief physician at Berlin’s Fliedner Clinic, notes that loneliness also has “enormous health relevance.”
Studies show it exacerbates a range of physical and mental health conditions. Social isolation in older adults has been linked to an increased risk of heart disease, stroke and dementia. Research also suggest that loneliness and social isolation may increase the likelihood of death as much as or more than other well-known risk factors, such as smoking, alcohol abuse and obesity.

Even before the current crisis, the Red Cross had described loneliness as a “hidden epidemic.” For some of society’s most isolated, coronavirus-related restrictions have erased the little social contact they had.
Efforts to slow the spread of the virus have shuttered social clubs, forced people to stay home and put up walls within families. At many homes for the elderly, residents are largely confined to their rooms, sometimes with meals left outside their doors.

Merkel said the plight for those in nursing homes has been a particular burden for her during the pandemic.
“That’s where loneliness, even under normal circumstances, can be a problem,” she said in an address to parliament. Now, she said, it is “cruel” that no one can be there for those nearing the end of their lives. “These 80- and 90-year-olds built our country.”

Before the pandemic, 87-year-old Ursula Woydt’s social life revolved around a club for seniors in Schmargendorf, in southern Berlin, on the edge of a forest that skirts the city. The club offered art and language classes, concerts and readings. She found it a lifeline after her husband died 25 years ago.
But these days, her life is confined to her four-room apartment, where she listens to music and reads. “It’s not nice being totally alone,” she said. She doesn’t have access to the Internet, cutting her off from one avenue that many have used to fight social isolation.

“I miss talking to people, interacting with them,” she said. She doesn’t want to get the virus, so she takes social distancing measures seriously. But no one is sure how long those measures will last — how long until a widely available vaccine or effective treatment makes distancing less necessary.
Gisela Telchow, 84, lives alone in an apartment in the Berlin neighborhood of Zehlendorf. She has six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren but has not seen them outside of WhatsApp since the coronavirus arrived. One of her daughters visits once a week, wearing a mask and keeping a distance.
Telchow said the isolation is bearable — for now.
“It’s very difficult to be separated from people, but it also gives me strength to know that this is how it is for everyone in the world, not just me,” Telchow said.

Telling only the elderly to stay home would be “outrageous,” Telchow said. She said she feels lucky to have her health and a spacious apartment with a balcony, but she hasn’t thought as far ahead as Christmas and can’t imagine what she’d do if the restrictions last that long.
Schilling, of the Silbernetz hotline, said she would anticipate resistance to any restrictions that applied only or primarily to those over 70. She recounted a caller who had challenged age-based restrictions, saying that men are more likely to die of the virus than women, and asking why they’re not being treated differently.

For those whose time is precious, it is a particularly cruel situation, Schilling said.
“In old age, you become very aware of the limited lifetime you have left,” she said, adding that with no foreseeable end in sight, people are “doubly afraid.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/germany-eases-restrictions-coronavirus-old/2020/05/01/77ffa5a4-857c-11ea-81a3-9690c9881111_story.html

Comments 1 - 10 of 10        Search these comments

1   Ceffer   2020 May 2, 12:05pm  

Does German Soylent Green have an extra high alcohol content? Maybe a proof indicator on the label.
2   Tenpoundbass   2020 May 2, 12:54pm  

It's going to be a Motha Fuckin Bitch for the Millennials when they start hitting 60 years old and beyond.

I have noticed through out my life. Those youngsters that respected elders the least, and ridiculed them like age is an affliction, or lifestyle choice.
Were the same idiots on about 20 prescribed meds, bad liver, bad kidney, diabetes the whole works, everything that can go to hell on your body, will go to hell on their body after they hit 45.

The Boomers are aging gracefully or still able to kick about and get around, because while they had it easier than their parents. They are trying to age by living life to the fullest until their time comes. What Millennials don't realize, that my Generation probably saw the last of. People after 60 used to pretty much give up on enjoying life. Their last few decades were spent behind a TV tray, in front of a TV. Waiting for their next glass of prune juice and toast. They simply gave up.

Millennials are going to have it tougher than either of these groups, because they are going through life never thinking about their eventual twilight years and their subsequent mortality.
3   clambo   2020 May 3, 11:40am  

To add to tenpoundbass, many millennials I know don’t want to stop buying crap, fast food, etc. to save and invest for the future.

I met several in Florida who called me “lucky”, and I said “$500/month for 33 years=$1 million.”

They can’t quit weed, can’t quit buying clothes, shoes, going out, etc.

I told a hot female “You better get a rich dude from Singer Island to pay your rent or buckle down and invest for yourself because one day you will hit the hag button and you better have money by then.”

Girls understand the concept of hagging out suddenly, they see it all around them.

The best saver and investor is my friends son. He lived at home after college, got a job and does the opposite of his father; he buys mutual funds for capital appreciation. His father has coins in a safe including silver he bought at $50+ per ounce. (huge capital losses there).
4   Automan Empire   2020 May 3, 11:52am  

clambo says
has coins in a safe including silver he bought at $50+ per ounce.


Sounds like a classic case of Too Much Zerohedge.
5   Ceffer   2020 May 3, 11:56am  

clambo says
because one day you will hit the hag button and you better have money by then.


You must be covered in scars. The last time i mentioned the hag button to a woman, the frenzied insanity and assault were legend.

In their minds, the world is a permanent ingenue paradise with themselves on center stage. If you defy this illusion, you are toast and they will lay wait patiently forever and work behind your back to destroy you.
6   Patrick   2020 May 3, 12:26pm  

clambo says
coins in a safe including silver he bought at $50+ per ounce. (huge capital losses there).


Yes, that's kinda sad for now, but if you wait long enough, the $50 he paid in paper will go to zero while the silver will still have about the same value.

US paper dollars are now worth only about 5% of the value they had when they were redeemable for silver dollars.

The other 95% of their value was effectively taken by the Federal Reserve and given to bankers. Nice work if you can get it.

7   clambo   2020 May 3, 12:32pm  

But while he waits for the silver to get back, stocks are really appreciating capital gains and dividends too.

About the time he was yelling at me to get out of my mutual funds, and buy silver I rolled the dice on more AAPL shares and they split 7:1 (his coins didn’t)

I can now almost buy his house and coins with that gain.
8   Automan Empire   2020 May 3, 1:48pm  

Ceffer says
the frenzied insanity and assault were legend.


Yeah, another sure trigger for this is when your SO and friend are discussing their mutual friend who's always unhappy and acts snippy toward everyone, weigh in that what she needs is just a good fuck.

Chewie, add more power to the deflector shields!
9   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 May 3, 1:54pm  

Tenpoundbass says
Millennials are going to have it tougher than either of these groups, because they are going through life never thinking about their eventual twilight years and their subsequent mortality.


Think of how retarded it's going to look for a 50-year old to have some Harry Potter Quote tattooed along the side of their burgeoning belly & huge lovehandles, or "Hot Little BBQ" characters in Japanese on the back of their fat neck.

Or worst of all, a 60-year old woman with Victorian Wallpaper on their cleavage.

You can almost tell the DOB of a millennial by which kind of tattoo they have where and searching instagram.

"Hey, Grandma, Turn the Light On in the Darkness! You're so forgetful that you an a million other old farts born back in 1989 got that tattoo'd. Haw haw haw!"

"I'm so unique!"
10   Ceffer   2020 May 3, 2:05pm  

Automan Empire says
Yeah, another sure trigger for this is when your SO and friend are discussing their mutual friend who's always unhappy and acts snippy toward everyone, weigh in that what she needs is just a good fuck.

Trying to scale the walls of neurosis and chronic self centeredness with grappling hooks, strong ropes, and shit-test repellant is too daunting even for many dumb stick motivated males.

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