As
a paid participant in the UCSF Stress and Resilience study this month, I was
assigned to Method of Breathing and Shower (MOBS) condition. (Other conditions were exercise and
meditation.) This stress resilience
method involved daily morning breathing and hot showers for 21 consecutive days. I was fine with hot showers, but
did not like breathing as instructed by a 15-minute audio recording of a
monotonous male voice that made me want to return to sleep:
“Inhale, exhale, in, out, breathe
light and slow, slow inhale, slow exhale, in, out, no need to inhale all the
way or exhale all the way, breathe naturally, softly and relax.
Inhale, exhale, in and out, focus
on the breath with your full attention, breathing through the nose for both the
inhale and the exhale.
Inhale, exhale, focus just on this
even guiding breath, listen to the sound of your breath, and make it peaceful, soft
and relaxed as possible…"
Conscious breathing
exercises had to be done in the morning to “make the habit regular,” and on an
empty stomach...before breakfast, so stomach rumbling in hunger was distracting.
At Anza Branch Library, Dr.
Yangdron Kalzang of Kunde Institute-Center for Tibetan Wellness and Healing
presented talk on Tibetan Medicine: Self-Care, which has influences from India
(Ayurvedic), China (5 Elements) and Persia.
Tibetan Medicine focuses on digestive fire (immune system and internal
disorders) and emotional/mental health (stress). She outlined 3 "poisons of emotion":
desire/attachment, hatred/jealousy, and ignorance/delusion.
Dr.
Kalzang explained symbolism in Tibetan flag colors (similar to Traditional
Chinese Medicine’s Five Elements): blue=space, white=air, red=fire, green=water,
and yellow=earth. Youth is associated with earth and water. At older age 55+, fire is diminished, air
picks up, water is unstable so there is dryness; instead of drinking lots of
water that can overwork kidneys, Dr. Kalzang recommended consuming 1 tablespoon
of oil (ghee) to quench thirst.
Dr. Kalzang reviewed Progression of
Mental Imbalance in Tibetan Medicine:
imbalanced lifestyle+dietà stressà anxietyàpanic attackà depressionà maniaà madness/crazinessà bipolarà forgetfulness. Signs and symptoms of stress:
·
Physical: restless limbs/body, feeling
light/ungrounded, wanting to stretch, constant yawning, insomnia, shaking with
hunger
·
Mental: feeling overwhelmed,
agitated/anxious, difficulty focusing/concentrating, jumping/monkey mind,
short-tempered, paranoid
For stress relief, Dr. Kalzang recommended
take a break and breathe. She also demonstrated the art and craft of making
sachets of freshly ground nutmeg and caraway seeds wrapped in muslin fabric and
secured with string. To focus on breath,
inhale aroma of herbs. Add warmed ghee
to ground herbs to make poultice for application to acupressure points on body;
this Hormey treatment helps relax mind and body, reduces physical and mental
stress, boosts immune system, clears the mind and improves concentration. These “external accessory therapies” are
cost-effective, safe and without harmful side effects.
About
70% to 90% of adults age 65+ have been exposed to a potentially traumatic event in their lifetime. Sometimes conducting life review
with older adults brings up past trauma, so taking deep breaths can help bring
us back to the present.
Deep breathing’s role to keep us present was reinforced during SF Department of Public Health (DPH) training on Trauma Informed Systems (TIS) Initiative—Transforming Stress and Trauma: Fostering Wellness and Resilience. Other take-aways:
Deep breathing’s role to keep us present was reinforced during SF Department of Public Health (DPH) training on Trauma Informed Systems (TIS) Initiative—Transforming Stress and Trauma: Fostering Wellness and Resilience. Other take-aways:
·
“Connection
is the healing balm of trauma.”
·
Shift
perspective from “What is wrong with you?” to “What has happened to
you?” to provide context, foster compassion, help us see strengths
in face of adversity.
· Chronic stress can trigger brain into survival mode, so emotion brain (limbic system) takes over thinking brain (prefrontal cortex); aggravating
behavior is a “cause for a pause”: before react, pause & take a breath,
ask “What has happened to you? What is happening here? What is the need
behind this behavior? How can I respond to this need?”
·
Health
disparities: what’s wrong? Race+Place=Health; what happened? Trauma
(insidious, historical, institutional)àCommunity
violence=Health
·
Context
matters: oppression,
racism, sexism, classism, xenophobia, inequity, homophobia
·
Understanding
community level traumaàpromoting
community resilience: opportunity (intergenerational poverty,
divestmentàeconomic empowerment, quality
education, restorative justice); people (fragmented social relationships,
destructive social normsàrebuild relationships, strengthen
healthy social norms); place (unsafe public spaces, deteriorated
environments, unhealthy productsàsafer
public places, invest in environments, available healthy products)
· TIS principles in action: understand trauma & stress (find out ACE score and resiliency score https://acestoohigh.com/got-your-ace-score/); cultural humility & responsiveness (take implicit bias test https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/); safety (physical, social, emotional) & stability; compassion & dependability; collaboration & empowerment (foster voice & choice: Ask, Respond, Clarify, Confirm “Does this work for you?”); resilience & recovery (practice gratitude)
· TIS principles in action: understand trauma & stress (find out ACE score and resiliency score https://acestoohigh.com/got-your-ace-score/); cultural humility & responsiveness (take implicit bias test https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/); safety (physical, social, emotional) & stability; compassion & dependability; collaboration & empowerment (foster voice & choice: Ask, Respond, Clarify, Confirm “Does this work for you?”); resilience & recovery (practice gratitude)
·
Relationships
are central to healing:
healthy relationships involve attunement (being sensitive, responsive, in
harmony with feelings & needs of ourselves & others)
·
Relationship
building tool—Connect,
then Re-Direct PEARLS: Partnership (“Let’s work together”), Empathy
(“That sounds frustrating”), Apology (“I’m sorry that happened”), Respect
(“You have gone through a lot”), Legitimation (“It makes sense that you
feel this way”), Support (“Let’s see what we can do”)
Half-day
TIS was followed up with 2-day SF DPH Trauma Initiative Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute (SIYLI), based on Search Inside
Yourself: The Unexpected Path to Achieving Success, Happiness (and World Peace)(2012)
by Chade-Meng Tan, retired Google engineer and Jolly Good Fellow. Last summer, corporate mindfulness merchant Meng stepped down as chair of SIYLI over "inappropriate behavior."
I pondered: What does it mean to achieve success in Public Health? Is there more to life than happiness? Why did training video clips (and most of book) show only male talking heads reflecting tech bro culture? What happened to “context matters,” inclusion and diversity? This exclusion of female voices (lack of cognitive diversity) is troubling; last month, National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins finally acknowledged that “it is time to end the tradition in science of all-male speaking panels” so he will no longer accept invitations on such “manels.”
I pondered: What does it mean to achieve success in Public Health? Is there more to life than happiness? Why did training video clips (and most of book) show only male talking heads reflecting tech bro culture? What happened to “context matters,” inclusion and diversity? This exclusion of female voices (lack of cognitive diversity) is troubling; last month, National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins finally acknowledged that “it is time to end the tradition in science of all-male speaking panels” so he will no longer accept invitations on such “manels.”
SIYLI micro-practices, appropriated from Buddhism, focused on more breathing for
mindfulness-based emotional intelligence:
·
Mindfulness: listening (with attentiveness,
kindness, and curiosity); 3 breaths (1st attention to breathing, 2nd
relax body, 3rd ask “What’s important right now?”); focused
attention; minute to arrive (start meeting with 1 minute of silence to help
everyone be fully present); open awareness; noting (when you feel stuck: notice
it, name it, let it be, and just breathe)
·
Self-awareness: body scan; head, body, heart check-in with 3 breaths (1st breath scan head=thoughts, 2nd scan body=emotions +
sensations, 3rd scan heart=values/intentions); journaling; mindful eating
·
Self-management: SNBRR (Stop, Breathe, Notice,
Reflect, Respond—when triggered); mindful conversation (listen,
repeat back to check understanding with speaker); self-compassion; acceptance
(take breaths in & out, “Breathing in, I do my best; breathing out, I let
go of the rest”—when distressed)
·
Motivation
& resilience:
values & envisioning journaling; hands on chair (let feeling of chair
fabric be “mental cue to remember your intention for how you show up”);
resilience (breathe in & out with feelings and recognize them as temporary
to create mental space for “wise response & growth”)
·
Empathy
& compassion: "just like me" & offering kindness (bring
to mind people you know & work with, consider your common humanity, wish
them well); shift to connection (take 3 breaths to build connection with others
in the moment—1st breath to settle the mind, 2nd breath
to see similarity, 3rd breath to offer kindness); walking meditation
(savor process of walking, attention to sensations including transfer of weight
from one foot to next and feet on ground); empathetic listening (to feelings
and words)
·
Leadership: difficult conversations preparation by
thinking through 3 levels (content, feelings, identity) from each person’s
point of view; impact is not intention (when you notice feeling irritated/frustrated
with someone, consider 3 levels that may be driving other person’s behavior);
compassion practice (when encountering someone in distress, pause & reflect
on situation, attention to what they are experiencing, invite positive wishes
for them); ask “what would be of service?” (get to core of what’s important)
Our
self-motivation comes from flow channel (diagram pictured above) which occurs
when challenge matches your skill level, similar to person-environment
fit. Meng covered this “art of
self-motivation” in his book’s chapter 6 on “Making Profits,” citing male TED
Talk authorities like tech bro Tony Hsieh (author of Delivering Happiness: A
Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose), Daniel Goleman (Emotional
Intelligence), Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (Flow: The Psychology of Optimal
Experience), and Daniel Pink (Drive: The Surprising Truth About What
Motivates Us). Later in this chapter's envisioning practice section, Meng mentioned a few female authorities, like his friend Roz Savage (first woman to
complete Atlantic Rowing Race solo, so motivated after writing her
obituary reflecting on the life she aspired to live that she gave up her “old
life” to pursue her dream of rowing across oceans) and Barbara Fittipaldi (CEO
of Center for New Futures); more breathing in resilience section citing Matthieu Ricard (co-author with Goleman of Happiness: A Guide to
Developing Life’s Most Important Skill); and then discussing optimism, Meng cited positive psychologists Martin Seligman (Learned Optimism: How to Change Your
Mind and Your Life) and Barbara Fredrickson (Positivity: Top-notch
Research Reveals the 3 to 1 Ratio That Will Change Your Life).
SIYLI training cost $1,250 but I attended through SF DPH at no cost, other than 2 days of my time and skepticism. Much of this mindfulness material (minus videos of male talking heads) is covered in Stanford Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (which I delivered as workshop facilitator while employed at On Lok, and supplemented self-efficacy approach with linkages to community resources to address social determinants of health in supporting participants' weekly behavioral action plans).
Jenée Johnson, SF DPH Program Innovation Leader for
Mindfulness, Trauma and Racial Equity (would be helpful to add Gender Equity), invited SIYLI graduates to Mindfulness
Meet-Up so we could continue “integrating self-awareness,
self-management, empathy, resilience and compassion into our lives and work.”
Mindful magazine staff showed up to take photos to accompany upcoming
article about DPH’s mindfulness efforts.
Ron Purser, SFSU Professor of Management, described his participation in SIYLI:
Ron Purser, SFSU Professor of Management, described his participation in SIYLI:
“The
workshop was an amalgam of childish icebreakers, turn-to-your partner
exercises, three-minute breathing meditations, and a hodgepodge of superficial
materials on emotional intelligence as a pathway to career success, along with
the usual neurobabble that meditation changes your brain…
What’s happening with corporate mindfulness is a complete
denigration of critical thinking into the causes of stress, which are all
privatized into the individual. There is also an implicit denigration of
collective action and building solidarity. This trope is so common—“Change
always starts from within. We first have to change ourselves, take
self-responsibility, do self-care.”… The fact that these corporate initiatives
are also [do it yourself] undercuts social change. It’s sending individuals a
message that they are the problem, they need to be calm, and they need to
regulate.
We’re always in a mode of trying to remake ourselves, refashion
ourselves. We’re entrepreneurs of the self. Just look at the boom in meditation
and mindfulness apps. The products are being hawked. Everything is about
mustering our internal resources in an enterprise culture where subjectivity is
monetized as mental capital and we’re human capital.
But we don’t look at how external resources in the social and
political environment are really what helps us become more resilient. Do we
have sick days at work? Do we have money in a savings account? Do we have
neighbors who can help us out? Do we have health care? All of these things are
much more conducive to building resilience than these gadgets and techniques
being marketed...
Mindfulness is a very unregulated industry…where anyone can hang
out a shingle...
It seems innocuous. What’s wrong with a three-minute breathing exercise? What’s wrong with that, you know? Well, nothing particularly. But can we aim a little bit higher?”—Ron Purser, author of McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality, interviewed by Zachary Siegel, “Why Corporations Want You to Shut Up and Meditate,” The Nation (July 25, 2019)
It seems innocuous. What’s wrong with a three-minute breathing exercise? What’s wrong with that, you know? Well, nothing particularly. But can we aim a little bit higher?”—Ron Purser, author of McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality, interviewed by Zachary Siegel, “Why Corporations Want You to Shut Up and Meditate,” The Nation (July 25, 2019)
Could deep breathing fresh air have the same effect of relaxing people who use smoking/vaping (breathing carcinogens) as a form of stress relief? Last month, headed over to Oakland Museum to attend
Alameda County Behavioral Health’s Tobacco Conference, Vaping Nicotine: How Safe
is it for Our Communities? where
I was greeted by these posters showing smoking prevalence among vulnerable
populations (chronically homeless, incarcerated, HIV infected, low-income,
mentally ill/SUD) and behavioral health/psychiatric co-morbidities (OUD,
schizophrenia, bipolar, alcohol use, SUD, anxiety). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
recommended that mental health facilities go smoke-free and stop providing
cigarettes to patients as an incentive/reward.
No data based
on age, but vaping among older adults as a form of harm reduction to quit
smoking seems to have gone mainstream since Paula Span wrote “Some Older Smokers Turn to Vaping. That May Not Be a Bad Idea” in The New
York Times (December 8, 2017) and Jia Tolentino wrote “The Promise of Vaping and the Rise of Juul: Teens have taken a technology that was supposed to help grownups stop
smoking and invented a new kind of bad habit, molded in their own image,” in
The New Yorker (May 14, 2018).
Gurinder
Singh Wadhwa, DO, shared research showing that despite intentions for harm
reduction, many smokers do not transition fully from smoking to vaping;
instead, they become dual users increasing nicotine consumption. People with behavioral health conditions
consume 42% of all cigarettes, while research suggests quitting tobacco
decreases depression and anxiety. Further,
integrating tobacco treatment into behavioral health treatment can help clients
with tobacco addiction.
Phil
Gardiner, DrPH, Senior Program Officer at UC Tobacco Related Disease Research Program
(TRDRP) and Co-Chair of African-American
Tobacco Control Leadership Council (AATCLC), likened vaping as another addictive
tobacco product to menthol cigarettes marketed to African-Americans over the
past half-century. Tobacco-related
diseases are #1 cause of death in African-American community, killing over
45,000 a year. (See 15-minute documentary, “Black Lives/Black Lungs.”)
Yet, 90% of black organizations, including Congressional Black Caucus,
accept tobacco money so they don’t speak against tobacco industry that is killing
black lives.
After the power
point presentations, we enjoyed working lunch over discussion circles: Stanford Tobacco Toolkit (targeting schoolkids);
Power of Marketing (SF-based Juul
has 76% of vaping market share, $1.6 million marketing budget targeting young
users); Vaping Devices Deconstructed (1 Juul pod=20 cigarettes worth of
nicotine!); Advocacy Work (community participation is driving force behind adoption
of Tobacco Retail Licensing ordinances that prohibit sale of flavored tobacco,
establish minimum price floors and package size requirements for tobacco
products and limit tobacco retailers per capita); and Tobacco Dependence
Treatment Providers and Resources (pictured above, Project Eden provides outpatient
services to adults with substance use disorders, using harm reduction though
term not used because funding based on abstinence model).
SF passed an
ordinance banning the sale and distribution of e-cigarettes, pending a Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) review of their safety, including inhaling secondhand
vapor, presumably to protect children. Never
mind FDA already requires health warning labels on all tobacco products, SF did not go so far as to ban
conventional cigarettes that kill more than 400,000 Americans each year. Instead, Beverly Hills became first U.S. city
to ban sale of tobacco products except cigars, effective 2021.
Surviving
SF DPH’s Supporting
Health by Empowering & Lifting Leaders (SHELL) hosted an interactive seminar,
HIV Long-Term Survivors with Tez Anderson, founder of Let’s Kick ASS (AIDS
Survivor Syndrome) and HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day (June 5, when CDC reported first
cases). Tez came out of the closet at age 17 (in
1977), diagnosed HIV+ in 1983, had “mid-life” crisis at 26 (in 1986) when he
was told he had only two years to live, which made him think short-term so he
had no plans for college or saving money.
He moved to SF Castro gay mecca, where death and the expectation of
dying was prevalent. He experienced anger,
severe anxiety and depression; he sought help from therapists, but the ones he
could afford did not know how to help because they were trainees and too young
to understand. After Highly Active
Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) was introduced in 1996, HIV was transformed
from a death sentence to a chronic, but manageable condition.
Today more
than 60% of people living with HIV are age 50+, and these long-term HIV
survivors face unique challenges entering old age: poverty, social isolation/withdrawal,
survivor guilt (ASS v. PTSD), and harmful side effects from early medications
(neuropathy, enteropathy, arthritis, diarrhea, etc. which impair mobility and
engagement when they “need community more than ever”). Now age 60 and married for 12 years, Tez
views aging as inevitable and a privilege because people have value in
experience, so he embraces wrinkles and graying hair. He also discussed ageism, like not bothering
to test old people for sexually transmitted diseases, and PrEP marketing to
young.
At SF Main Library, journalist Keli Dailey hosted Surviving San Francisco: The Free Advice Show with
panelists:
·
Karen (Central City SRO
organizer): museum free days, free cycle, free films via SFPL’s Kanopy (video
streaming)
·
Dro (stand-up comic): work in
food industry for free meals
·
Peggy (social worker turned
start-up tech activist): survived on social worker salary $30K-60K by living in
rent control unit and being frugal
· Mark (civic tech entrepreneur):
find out Henry George’s 19th century solution to income inequality
by taking free walking tour with David Geisen
SF Public Library system is the real deal for surviving SF for all
ages, including its accessibility services. For the past 10 years, SF Main Library's psychiatric social worker helps library patrons who are homeless connect to support services. Research also shows library visits are equivalent to getting a pay raise!
During July 4th
weekend, joined American Independence was all about land: walking tour with
David Giesen. Starting at the Hostel in Union Square and
walking east to Chinatown and Financial District, David talked about various
social movements: charity (Glide Church’s fight against poverty, more about
changing individual v. transforming society), utopian communist (back-to-the
land Diggers, Mormons, American Indian occupation of Alcatraz, Jim Jones and
People’s Temple, Occupy), revolutionary socialist (Black Panthers, who lived in
building across from 701 Sutter Street building for sale with vacant
ground floor retail space for lease below Legal Assistance to the Elderly’s 2nd
floor offices, pictured above in right corner), and geonomic (Judaism, Henry George).
Sun Yat-Sen (1866-1925; 12-foot
statue in St. Mary’s Square, Chinatown), “Father of Modern China,” got
inspiration for his Three Principles of the People (nationalism, democracy, and
social welfare) for China while in SF in 1905.
After reading Progress and Poverty (1879) by American journalist
Henry George (1839-1897), Sun adopted the Georgist idea of equalization of land ownership based on a single tax on land values to generate government revenue for social welfare needs like clothing, food,
housing, and transportation.
As State Assemblyman,
Willie L. Brown, Jr. twice introduced land value tax legislation but was
defeated; instead, California voters passed Proposition 13, People’s Initiative
to Limit Property Taxation, in 1978, partly motivated by the idea that older
Californians should not be taxed out of their homes. Yet, after walking through many vacant lots, empty
storefronts, and streets with unhoused people in the City, Georgism is appealing
to encourage productive land use v. land speculation.
Margot Kushel, MD,
Director of UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations and Benioff
Homelessness & Housing Initiative, presented a standing room only Grand
Rounds talk, Aging Among Homeless Populations: An Emerging Crisis, at UCSF Mission Bay.
She talked about homelessness in SF and California, then shared findings
from HOPE HOME
(Health Outcomes in Populations Experiencing Homelessness in Older Middle agE), an ongoing longitudinal cohort study examining homelessness in adults
aged 50+ in Oakland.
·
Homeless population is aging: proportion of single homeless older
adults age 50+ in SF has grown to 50%, from 11% in 1990 and 37% in 2003
·
Cohort born 1955-1965 have elevated risk of homelessness during
their lifetime because they came of age during recession and not able to
make-up lost income, Reagan made massive cuts in federal affordable housing that
were never restored—California is 2nd worst, with only 22 units of
affordable and available for every 100 extremely low-income households; only 34% of low-income, at-risk elderly households receive Section 8 rental assistance
·
Racial justice issue: Blacks are less than 6% of SF population, yet
have 3-4x risk of being homeless. Housing
is primary means of wealth, yet there is discrimination in home ownership (segregation,
redlining, predatory lending) and rental market.
·
HOPE HOME study: 450 participants, 77% men, 80% African-American
·
Pathways into homelessness: 44% of homeless studied experienced
their 1st episode of homelessness after age 50—most married; many
worked multiple, minimum wage, non-union, physically demanding jobs; 3 triggers—job
loss & unable to compete with high school education, sick & unable to continue physically demanding job, death of spouse/parent. (Contrast early
onset homeless: traumatic adverse child experiences, mental health/substance
use started in teen years, prison, TBI, etc.)
·
Health status: “50 is the new 75” (premature aging, prevalence of
geriatric syndromes); self-reported multiple chronic conditions (hypertension,
arthritis, hepatitis, asthma); higher proportion with functional impairment (1/3 have executive function impairment that interferes with following sequential steps to
secure housing), substance use problems common to numb fear (65% drug
use-cocaine, cannabis, opioids; 26% alcohol use); mental health (over 1/3 depression,
1/3 PTSD, 18% psychiatric hospitalization); high rates of acute care
utilization, high mortality rate & institutional care (nursing home stays);
majority obtain housing within 18 months
· Interventions/solutions:
deeply affordable housing (expand & preserve, target those who make <30%
AMI; follow legislative efforts at National Low Income Housing Coalition),
eviction prevention (just cause in SF, Oakland, San Jose; AB 1482 proposes
state-wide just cause laws with limits on large rental increases), legal
assistance, emergency housing assistance, rapid re-housing, permanent
supportive housing (Housing First model, need to adapt for needs of older
adults to age in place); advocate “housing is the best medicine” (push back
against individual narrative—know how to treat serious mental illness, real solutions
point to affordable housing)!
Dr. Kushel joins discussion with graduate
student Andy Kim and UCSF Institute for
Global Health Sciences (IGHS) Executive Director
Jaime Sepulveda. Dr. Kushel said homelessness is vastly undercounted due
to surveys in English and federal definition of homelessness does not include
Asians who might have 8 people crowded in SRO.
Community Living
Campaign’s Outer Sunset Connector Margaret Graf organized this month’s Senior
Power presentations at Taraval Police Station with speakers from SF DPH’s Community Health Equity & Promotion (CHEP) and Safe Streets for Seniors.
For older adults age 60+
living in SF, Community and Home Injury Prevention Program (CHIPPS) provides
free home safety assessments and minor home safety modifications (if income eligible)
because “seniors are happier and healthier living at home.” Yet, people at home can risk injury from
falls, scalds (hot liquid), burns (dry heat) and fires; and seniors may recover
more slowly, leading to loss of mobility and independence, hospitalization and
risk of death. Injuries at home are
preventable if we prioritize safety:
·
Changes in behavior: see doctor (get balance
check, review meds that may cause instability/dizziness); get vision and hearing check (wear glasses with correct prescription, wear hearing
aid if needed); regular physical activity (tai chi helps balance); wear right
shoes (non-slip sole, breathable material, high back, flat/low heel,
wide-mouth, no laces, soft and padded; if diabetic, podiatrist can write
prescription for shoes paid by Medicare); careful if smoke (well-ventilated
area, large ashtrays for butts, never in bed or lying down on couch; better to
quit with help from 1-800-NOBUTTS)
·
Climate change: in SF,
“extreme heat” is above 85F, can lead to dehydration, heat exhaustion and heat stroke; and will worsen
conditions like heart disease, diabetes and respiratory illnesses. Some tips during extreme heat: call family/friend
to check in; avoid being outdoors 10 am–4 pm; drink plenty of water; take cool
showers/baths; avoid alcohol; eat small meals that are low in protein; wear
loose, breathable fabrics. To find a
cool place, check SF72.org or call 311.
·
Changes in home environment: get free home safety assessment; good
lighting, reduce clutter and trip hazards; CHIPPS can provide surge protectors
(do not run electrical cords under carpets to avoid sparks), install carbon
monoxide detectors, annually test smoke and CO2 detectors, etc.
DPH Planner Mimi Tan presented Safe Streets for Seniors as part of Vision Zero: Eliminating Traffic Deaths and Reducing Injuries, highlighting SF’s novel creation of Vision Zero High Injury Network combining mapped data from SF General Hospital and SF Police to identify 13% of
streets where 75% of severe and fatal injuries occurred, to prioritize safety
improvements. Seniors account for half
of pedestrian deaths, yet only 15% of the City’s population. In 2018, SF saw 23 traffic-related
deaths. To date this year, SF has
already seen 21 traffic-related deaths so advocates have called for City leaders to declare a state of emergency for
traffic safety.
SF Hazards & Climate Resilience
(HCR): People with Disabilities + Older Adults was an opportunity to provide feedback on draft HCR Plan strategies for existing buildings, new
development, public awareness, housing, utilities, waterfront, transportation,
etc. and build community while enjoying 100% plant-based breakfast and lunch provided by Nourish
Café!
Jim Buker, Project
Manager from One SF Office of Resilience and Capital Planning, led
efforts in partnership with Department of Emergency Management, DPH, Department
of the Environment, and SF Planning. Raimi Associates staff facilitated
small group discussions. Many of us in attendance experienced 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (30th anniversary on October
17) and 2017 Labor Day heat wave. FEMA requires 5-year update local hazards plan, and draft document expected in November
2019. SF residents can take HCR Survey at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/SFhazards-English
David Munoz Ventura, Senior Project
Coordinator with the Seismic Safety Outreach Program (SSOP) (pictured above
with his colleague Jia) presented Personal
Preparedness: A Seismic-Safety Plan for Older & Disabled Adults at Institute on Aging. SSOP is a partnership between SF Department of Building
Inspection and Community Youth Center (CYC). (CYC Program Director Michael Wong was former
Asian Community Preparedness Manager of the American Red Cross Bay Area Chapter, running its Youth for Chinese Elderly Program, which partnered bilingual youth volunteers with
monolingual Chinese elderly in emergency and disaster preparedness; since 2015,
Michael brought this intergenerational model to CYC.)
All training participants received SSOP for Senior
Preparedness booklet and Dynamo Radio
Light. David reminded us that we survive through social cohesion, our interdependence,
so get connected: use digital networks to stay informed via SFDEM, SF72org, 511 and 311; WhatsApp messaging; sign-up to meet
neighbors on Nextdoor; upload important documents in cloud
or Google drive. For people with disabilities
who are not able to Drop, Cover and Hold On during earthquake, David modified instructions to protect head and neck
with arms/pillows, and do not head for doorway (unless you’re in 19th
century adobe home).
Brain
Awareness (last month)
At JCCSF’s
3rd Annual Brain Fitness Forum, comedic monolinguist Josh Kornbluth performed Josh’s
Brain Improv describing his experience as an Atlantic Fellow at Global Brain Health Institute of UCSF Memory and Aging Center.
With his credentials as a graduate of Bronx High School of Science and
theatrical performer, he set out to learn as much about brain science to educate
audiences about brain disease
research and to help remove the stigma relating to people with dementia and
their caregivers. Josh’s Citizen Brain series can be
viewed on his youtube channel.
Forum ended
with a documentary screening of Too Soon to Forget: The Journey of Younger Onset Alzheimer’s Disease (YOAD). Up to 5% of the more
than 5 million Americans with Alzheimer's are living with YOAD (diagnosed before
age 65), which can be diagnosed as young as age 30. Congress
has introduced YOAD Parity Health Act of 2019 (H.R.
1903/S. 901), which would allow individuals living with YOAD to access programs
under the Older Americans Act (OAA). Former New York Times reporter Phil Gutis, diagnosed with YOAD at age 54, has been chronicling his journey online.
Elder Care Alliance, a non-profit senior living organization, hosted
afternoon Celebration of Dementia-Inclusive Art & Community at SOMa
Cultural Arts Center: a drop-in “open classroom” where participants, who
received Dementia-Inclusive tote bags, were free to enjoy refreshments, make art,
view posters, sit at tables to respond (drawing, collage, writing, etc.) to
prompts from issue cards stamped “Dementia-Inclusive Communities Initiative” about
creating an “age-friendly” environment: care, culture, physical space and built
environment.
Interactive Let’s Redefine Age … woops, hard to read small print!
Cards read: What are things you fear when you think about getting older? What are things you love about your
own aging process? For collection of responses, visit #Elevate Aging.
On Lok 30th
Street Senior Center, which is celebrating 40 years, hosted 4-part How You Age Matters series. Center Director Valorie Villela
introduced UCSF geriatrician Louise Aronson, who presented Many Faces of
Dementia. For Dr. Aronson,
dementia is personal as her late father had Alzheimer’s and her mother has mild
cognitive impairment. Her
recommendations:
·
Keep
healthy and active: eat a healthy/Mediterranean diet; exercise
regularly; keep your mind active (consider brain training); don’t smoke; keep
your weight, blood pressure, and blood sugar under good control; maintain at
least a few close, personal relationships
·
Some
things to do that improve life and your future, whether or not your have
dementia: Get evaluated; think about what matters most
to you; get a hearing aid if you need one; stay active and social; make or
update your advance directive; start doing all the fun things you can afford.
·
Communicating
with someone with dementia: NEVER reason, shame, say “remember?” or “I
told you” or “You can’t”, condescend, force, abandon; INSTEAD, distract,
reassure, divert, reminisce, repeat, offer simple instructions, be kind, provide
choices, demonstrate, try a different approach, encourage and support
Good Life before
Good Death
“…there is more of a romance to death than to aging currently…a good
death is good, but hopefully it's pretty short and quick, right? Whereas we're
talking decades of life and one of the things I like to say is do I know enough
palliative care to give you a good death? Yes, but more importantly, I know
enough geriatrics to give you a good life.
…if you look at a lot of health systems or other places, you'll see, oh here's pediatrics, here's adults, here's death. Oh, what happened in between? Oh we became invisible, we don't matter. And that's why we need elderhood because there are three phases whenever you're talking about kids and adults or childhood and adulthood, you need to invoke the elders and elderhood as well.”—Louise Aronson, MD, geriatrician and author of Elderhood: Redefining Aging, Transforming Medicine, Reimagining Life, as guest at Geripal (May 30, 2019)
…if you look at a lot of health systems or other places, you'll see, oh here's pediatrics, here's adults, here's death. Oh, what happened in between? Oh we became invisible, we don't matter. And that's why we need elderhood because there are three phases whenever you're talking about kids and adults or childhood and adulthood, you need to invoke the elders and elderhood as well.”—Louise Aronson, MD, geriatrician and author of Elderhood: Redefining Aging, Transforming Medicine, Reimagining Life, as guest at Geripal (May 30, 2019)
At Dr. Aronson’s presentation at City Lights
bookstore, sat behind Paul Kleyman, editor of Generations Beat Online. Dr. Aronson explained that she originally
called her book, Oldhood, because she wanted to reclaim the word “old.” However, after someone pointed out that title
would be grammatically incorrect, she changed the title to Elderhood. (This contrasts with old-naysayer
geriatricians like Juergen Bludau’s Aging, But Never Old: The Realities, Myths & Misrepresentations of the Anti-Aging Movement
(2010) and Marc Agronin’s The End of Old Age: Living a Longer, More Purposeful Life (2018) which opens with an introduction called, “Old is the Problem and
Aging is the Solution," and leave it to Big
Pharma to embrace “Get Old.”)
SF
Main Librarian Janet Tom introduced Last Wishes: Start Conversation Now.
(Representing Library Services to an Aging Population, Janet presented The
New Frontier: Hot Topics to Engage Older Populations based on her Death
& Dying series at the American Library Association’s Annual Conference, in
Washington, DC! To increase access, Janet also arranged
to have several programs in her Death series recorded for posting at SFPL
youtube channel, starting with What Happens to My Body When I Die).
Nancy
Belza (financial services sales executive) and Paul Puccinelli, LMFT of Dyalogues (for-profit
co-founded by Dawn Gross, MD in palliative care,) began with a cards exercise
that was eerily similar to Go Wish (non-profit) intended to reduce
stress and stigma around end-of-life discussions, while practicing our
listening, empathy and curiosity skills for stronger connections. (Stanley Terman, a psychiatrist, created My Way for Natural Dying cards through his non-profit, Caring Advocates.)
Nancy and Paul instructed us to
organize cards based on relative importance, and then invite our partners into
this “gift of conversation” using these prompts because curiosity leads to
discovery: Tell me more, What does that look like, How could I support you,
How would I know, and Help me understand.
Take-aways:
·
This is about NOW: don’t
have to wait to have these conversations.
·
Don’t assume to know
what others want, without first having a conversation.
·
More than one
conversation: life is dynamic, what matters most to us changes over time.
·
Talking about what
matters at end of life, with those who matter, can ensure that our vision is
respected and honored.
Shoshana Ungerleider, MD, introduced
Ungerleider Palliative Care Lecture, Advance Care Planning with a Dementia Diagnosis to Lessen Suffering.
Catherine
A. Madison, MD Director at Ray Dolby Brain Health Center, introduced Advance Directive for Dementia, developed by Barak Gaster, primary
care MD at University of Washington, and profiled in The New York Times
article published last year. Dementia
Directive is recommended for all patients at age 65, when they become at risk
for cognitive impairment that could lead to dementia.
·
Because tough conversations rarely go as planned, provide prompts (for
example, use Go Wish cards developed by geriatrician Elizabeth Menkin, MD) and then focus on listening,
reflecting, learning and working on a common objective.
·
Become comfortable with your talking points, focusing on goals, function
and quality of life.
·
Be flexible: “You look uncertain about this…We don’t need to decide
today—at this moment. Let’s talk more at
our next meeting.”
·
Try mindfulness: Pay attention in
a non-judgmental manner, on purpose, to what matters most and bringing your
whole self to the experience.
Dr. Gaster singled out dementia from multiple health conditions for an
advance health care directive due to its nature as a slowly progressive
neurodegenerative disease that leaves people with a long-time frame of
diminishing cognitive function and loss of ability to self-care; many Americans
who value autonomy may view living with advanced dementia as an unacceptable
loss of dignity. In contrast, the
standard advance directive focuses on rare conditions like persistent vegetative
state, permanent coma, or imminently terminal condition that do not apply to
dementia.
Steve Heilig, MPH, Director of Public Health and Education
at San Francisco Medical Society, echoed Dr. Madison’s views.
Vaping without nicotine still harms blood vessels, Penn study finds
ReplyDeleteby Tom Avril, Updated: August 22, 2019
A growing body of research suggests that electronic cigarettes can damage blood vessels in the short term, causing them to become inflamed and stiff, even when the vaping liquid does not contain nicotine. What’s not yet clear, though is which of the various inhaled components of e-liquids are to blame.
In a new University of Pennsylvania study, researchers found the kind of damage associated with developing atherosclerosis -- what is popularly called hardening of the arteries.
Blood flow and other markers of vascular function returned to normal an hour after the study participants used a vaping device without nicotine, so it is unknown if long-term use would cause permanent damage, said senior author Felix W. Wehrli.
But if so, he said the findings are reason for concern.
“All of these are measures that are suggestive of a disturbance of the vascular system,” Wehrli said. “You can imagine for somebody who keeps on vaping at regular intervals, daily, for weeks, month, and years, that the parameters would never go down to baseline.”
Most studies of e-cigarettes have examined the effects of vaping liquids that contain nicotine. An addictive substance, it represents the main attraction for vapers, some of whom use the devices in an attempt to quit cigarettes. But increasingly, some users opt for nicotine-free vaping liquids in an attempt to wean themselves.
Yet just as e-cigarettes with nicotine are not an entirely harmless alternative to cigarettes, e-cigarettes without nicotine seem to pose risks, said Wehrli, a professor of radiologic science and biophysics at Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine. Some nonsmokers, including youths, also have tried nicotine-free vaping — a bad idea, he said.
The study, published in the journal Radiology, consisted of 31 participants who had never smoked or vaped, with an average age of 24.
Each took 16 puffs from a vaping device, lasting 3 seconds at a time.
Researchers measured the participants’ blood-vessel function before and after the vaping. They restricted blood flow by placing a cuff on each person’s right thigh for 5 minutes, then used MRIs to gauge how well their blood vessels recovered.
After vaping, the scans revealed a 34 percent reduction in how much the participants’ femoral arteries dilated when the cuff was removed, on average, when compared to the same measurement before vaping. The researchers also measured a 17.5 percent reduction in peak blood-flow velocity after vaping and a 20 percent drop in the oxygen levels of participants’ leg veins.
Some of the damage may be due to the specific chemistry of the substances involved, whereas some harm may be due to the fact that the particles, regardless of type, are so small, said lead study author Alessandra Caporale, a post-doctoral researcher.
“They can go deep into your lungs,” she said.
Neal L. Benowitz, who has studied e-cigarettes at the University of California San Francisco, praised the Penn researchers for their use of high-tech methods to measure blood-vessel function.
He cautioned that their study involved just one type of vaping device — the Eco series made by ePuffer — and that the findings should not be generalized to reflect all e-cigarettes. Devices that operate at higher temperatures may be riskier, for example.
“The hotter it is, the more thermal degradation products you generate,” said Benowitz, a professor of medicine at UCSF. Lower-temperature devices, likewise, would presumably be safer, he said. And none contain the tar that is found in cigarettes.
https://www.inquirer.com/health/vape-study-nicotine-inflammation-penn-20190822.html
Coronavirus anxiety? Therapist recommends deep breaths, staying in the moment
ReplyDeletePosted Mar 09, 2020
By Anne-Gerard Flynn | Special to The Republican
CHICOPEE — Licensed clinical social worker Wendy Gannett has some advice for those worried about the spread of the new coronavirus.
“I advise people to take it day to day and follow recommendations put forth by the state of Massachusetts,” says Gannett, director of Chicopee outpatient services for River Valley Counseling Center. “I talk about how it is easy to let anxiety spiral and to bring it back to what we know, and what we can do.”…
People who are exposed are being asked to quarantine themselves by staying at home for 14 days. Any tips on how to manage the confinement in terms of this loss of control?
I advise that if you have to be quarantined, think of it as something that will end in 14 days.
In the meantime, accept that it is a bummer and make the best of it.
Read that book you can never get to, binge watch Netflix, learn to make a new recipe, call friends you never have time to, maybe even write a snail mail letter.
Learn something you have always wanted to but never had the time to.
Reach out via computer to other people quarantined and get support.
How about people’s worries over loss of income if their work hours are impacted, or if the impact involves added expense like having to pay for child care if schools close?
I find myself worrying about the “what if this” and “what if that” as well, but the Buddhists would advise to just stay in the present moment.
Worrying about “what ifs” won’t fix them and and the “what ifs” might not happen.
Reassure yourself that you will handle things as they come, but worrying ahead of time on things that may or may not happen won’t help.
How about anxiety in young people around the virus and how it could affect their school and social plans. How should parents talk about the virus to them?
I talk to my five children much in the same way as my advice on not to worry ahead of time on things that may or may not happen. Yes, this is scary, but we have gotten through much worse in the past and we will get through this. Come back to the moment. What can we do now to have fun and relax.
And finally, family worries over someone older and not well getting the virus?
We are all worrying about older people and sick people being more vulnerable.
Of course, we fear those people dying even more.
The Buddhists also say remembering that we all die keeps us on our toes and living life to the fullest.
Don't put off that call to grandma or your elderly neighbor.
Don’t freak out that everyone is going to die — but use this as an opportunity to not put off today what you can do today.
While taking a deep breath, look at the numbers. Two to 4 percent of people who get the virus die — statistically, the odds are in our favor. Try to take a deep breath and keep breathing.
https://www.masslive.com/news/2020/03/coronavirus-anxiety-therapist-recommends-deep-breaths-staying-in-the-moment.html
JANUARY 22, 2021
ReplyDeleteFiling Suit for ‘Wrongful Life’
by Paula Span
…Gerald Greenberg died in 2016 — and a recent lawsuit brought by his widow charges that when he was unresponsive and near death from sepsis at Montefiore New Rochelle Hospital in Westchester County, the hospital and an attending physician there failed to follow his directive.
The suit alleges that they also disregarded a New York State MOLST — medical orders for life-sustaining treatment — form and his spouse’s explicit instructions to a doctor who called to seek her guidance.
Medical records show that her husband received antibiotics and other unwanted treatments and tests. The suit charges that he survived for about a month in the unresponsive state that he had sought to avoid…
“They made the end of his life horrible and painful and humiliating,” Dr. Greenberg said. “What’s the sense of having a living will if it’s not honored?”
…“In the past, people have said, ‘How have we harmed you if we kept you alive?’” said Thaddeus Pope, a professor at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law in St. Paul, Minn., who follows end-of-life legal cases. “Now, courts have said this is a compensable injury.”
…2017 analysis of 150 studies, involving nearly 800,000 Americans, found that among those over 65, only 45.6 percent had completed an advance directive, including barely half of nursing home residents.
But recent evidence suggests that those proportions have climbed during the coronavirus pandemic. The crisis has made such questions less abstract and the need to honor documents more urgent.
Patients themselves may bear some responsibility for mix-ups. Advance directives go astray, get locked in desk drawers, become so outdated that designated decision makers have died. Or they use language like “no heroic measures,” so vague that “it’s hard for doctors to comply with,” Mr. Pope said.
The state MOLST or POLST (portable orders for life-sustaining treatment) forms strive to make the decisions concrete by providing detailed documentation of patients’ wishes and functioning as physicians’ orders. Studies in Oregon and West Virginia have demonstrated the forms’ effectiveness, but as several of these cases show, that is not universal.
Sometimes — nobody has tracked how often — institutions overlook the documents in patients’ charts or ignore conversations with health care proxies. Doctors who doubt that a patient actually prefers to die may override the instructions.
…In Georgia, Jacqueline Alicea won a $1 million settlement from Doctors Hospital of Augusta and a surgeon…
In Montana, a jury delivered what is believed to be the first verdict in a wrongful life case, awarding $209,000 in medical costs and $200,000 for “mental and physical pain and suffering” to the estate of Rodney Knoepfle in 2019…
Beatrice Weisman, 83, had been hospitalized after a stroke in 2013 when doctors at Maryland General Hospital found her turning blue and resuscitated her, an action that her advance directive and MOLST form specifically prohibited.
The Weisman family sued and in 2017 received a “satisfactory” sum through mediation…
Dick Magney had opted for palliative care, and his doctors were complying, until someone reported potential neglect to Humboldt County’s adult protective services agency. The county filed a petition to take over his health care, removing his wife as his decision maker, and ordered that Mr. Magney receive antibiotics he had earlier refused. At one point, the county won temporary conservatorship.
“It just led to him suffering longer,” said Allison Jackson, the lawyer representing Mr. Magney’s wife. Mr. Magney died in 2015.
A state appellate court ruled that the petition to remove Mr. Magney’s wife had been fraudulent. She eventually won more than $200,000 in reimbursement for lawyers’ fees and pursued a federal civil rights complaint, leading to a $1 million settlement from the county. Two lawyers representing the county now face disciplinary charges from the California state bar…
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/22/health/elderly-dnr-death-lawsuit.html
Dr. Francis Collins to step down as head of NIH
ReplyDeleteBy Maggie Fox, CNN
October 5, 2021
Dr. Francis Collins, the folksy, guitar-playing director of the National Institutes of Health, announced Tuesday that he plans to step down as head of the gigantic research agency by the end of the year.
"It has been an incredible privilege to lead this great agency for more than a decade," Collins, the longest serving presidentially appointed NIH director, said in a written statement Tuesday.
"I love this agency and its people so deeply that the decision to step down was a difficult one, done in close counsel with my wife, Diane Baker, and my family. I am proud of all we've accomplished. I fundamentally believe, however, that no single person should serve in the position too long, and that it's time to bring in a new scientist to lead the NIH into the future," Collins said.
"I'm most grateful and proud of the NIH staff and the scientific community, whose extraordinary commitment to lifesaving research delivers hope to the American people and the world every day."
Collins, who has served under three US presidents, will continue to lead his research laboratory at the National Human Genome Research Institute, according to the announcement…
Collins helped discover the genetic mutations involved in cystic fibrosis and neurofibromatosis type 1, which causes tumors on the skin, face and elsewhere. He became director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at NIH in 1993 and stayed there until he moved on to head all of NIH in 2009. As NHGRI director, he raced against privately funded genome entrepreneur Craig Venter to sequence the human genome first and ended up publicly collaborating with his institute's flashier rival.
As NIH director, Collins oversees the world's largest biomedical agency with a budget of nearly $52 billion. NIH gives out close to $42 billion every year for medical research and 6,000 scientists work in its own laboratories on the sprawling NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland, right outside Washington, DC.
He's Dr. Anthony Fauci's boss, as the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is one of the many institutes that make up NIH. These include the National Cancer Institute, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and others.
Collins has been a public face advocating for vaccination against coronavirus and common sense measures to control the pandemic such as mask use. The NIAID, under his leadership, helped develop the Moderna vaccine now being used to battle the virus -- and funded the years of research that helped get the vaccine ready to roll in months instead of the usual years needed to develop a new vaccine.
Collins has tried to bridge the growing gap between US conservatives and the scientific establishment by stressing his Christian beliefs. "I am a scientist and a believer, and I find no conflict between those world views," he wrote in a commentary for CNN in 2007.
Collins, who is 71, also advocated for more equality and announced in 2019 he would no longer serve on all-male panels. "Breaking up the subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) bias that is preventing women and other groups underrepresented in science from achieving their rightful place in scientific leadership must begin at the top," he said at the time
https://www.cnn.com/2021/10/04/health/collins-leaving-national-institutes-of-health/index.html
The Effects of Heat on Older Adults
ReplyDeleteWhen heat intensifies, older adults weaken—but they don’t have to
BY STEPHANIE DUTCHEN
Autumn 2021
The news in summer 2021 was almost as oppressive as the heat itself.
…older people are among those most vulnerable to falling ill and dying when the mercury rises. More than 80 percent of the estimated 12,000 people in the United States who die of heat-related causes annually are over age 60, according to the journalism resource Climate Central. As Earth gets hotter and human populations skew older, heat-related fatalities among older adults are expected to grow.
Climate change drives more frequent, more intense, and longer heat waves. It raises nighttime lows, preventing body temperatures from resetting when the sun sinks. Even short of heat waves, the volatility that climate change provokes in day-to-day highs can truncate the lives of older people with certain health conditions, researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health wrote in a 2012 study in PNAS.
Clinicians can help. A survey published in the Annals of Global Health in 2015 indicated that primary care physicians are U.S. adults’ most trusted sources of information related to climate change and health. The medical toolkit grows as research continues to reveal the biological and social factors that make older adults more susceptible to heat and identifies the most effective interventions.
Studies show that it can be hard for even healthy older adults to tell when it’s too hot or if they’re dehydrated. Cognitive decline exacerbates these problems. Older bodies also hold more heat than younger ones when the temperature climbs. Glands don’t release as much sweat. The heart doesn’t circulate blood as well, so less heat is released from vessels in the skin. Systems from the cardiovascular to the immune struggle to compensate.
Older adults are likely to have chronic health conditions and to take medications that contribute to heat intolerance. Clinicians best serve patients when they stay abreast of the literature on risk factors and, when heat looms in the forecast, consider warning, checking in with, or adjusting relevant medications of the vulnerable, says Francesca Dominici, the Clarence James Gamble Professor of Biostatistics, Population, and Data Science at the Harvard Chan School.
…What constitutes excessive heat goes beyond the National Weather Service definition of a heat wave, according to findings from researchers including John Spengler, the Akira Yamaguchi Professor of Environmental Health and Human Habitation at the Harvard Chan School.
“We’re seeing problems with hydration, sleep, and cognitive decline at 85 degrees and lower,” he says. “It makes us rethink what real heat stress is about.”
Dominici and others point out that temperatures don’t have to hit 90 or 100 degrees to be dangerous; they only have to rise beyond a region’s normal range.
Acclimation matters. Heat tends to cause more deaths at the start of summer than at the end. More deaths occur when heat strikes areas unaccustomed to it.
Finally, age intersects with socioeconomic factors to compound heat vulnerability. Older adults who are poor, who identify as Black or Hispanic, or who live in cities are more likely to become sick or die from excessive heat. Poorer neighborhoods tend to have fewer shade trees and reach a boil faster than wealthier environs. Having air conditioning at home isn’t enough if a patient can’t afford to run it. The Arizona county that includes Phoenix reported that of those who died indoors of heat-related causes in 2019 fully 91 percent had air conditioners, but the units were turned off, turned too low, or broken. Older adults with mobility issues or who lack social networks are less able to access resources such as cooling centers or have people check on them…
https://hms.harvard.edu/magazine/aging/effects-heat-older-adults