The complexity of frailty is dynamic conditions leading to vulnerabilities‚ and it has significantly impacted on the multi-dimensions of health in older adults. Notably‚ evidence shows that physical decline and disability are the vital key component in developing frailty1‚2‚8‚26‚32‚33. Considering for antecedents and risk factors of frailty‚ it can simply classify as intrinsic factors and extrinsic factors which have impacted on developing frailty equally. For intrinsic factors‚ the personal characteristics
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ways for those in middle adulthood‚ ranging from ages 40 to 65‚ to maintain good health. During this time frame‚ people’s bodies are changing and these changes are reflected both ex and internally. Their bones aren’t holding up too well‚ it’s becoming harder to lose weight and the gray hairs popping up left and right are especially annoying. While particular changes in an individual’s integumentary system (such as loss of hair or wrinkling of skin) during middle adulthood may be irreversible‚ there
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Communication is different in middle adulthood due to wanting to be closer to loved ones and have more meaningful relationships with spouse‚ adult children and friends. This happens due to having more time than before as a result of children moving out and not worrying about them as much. Middle adulthood also comes with possible hearing loss‚ which can cause withdrawal and isolation from society (PPT‚ p.8). A "midlife crisis" can occur during the stage of middle adulthood‚
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Childhood vs. Adulthood “The Only Thing That Is Constant Is Change.” ― Heraclitus As the above quote clearly states‚ change in inevitable. Even in human life‚ with time‚ an individual soul and the physical body undergoes change and thus with change‚ differences and similarities are bound to arise. In the human growth‚ the change can be broadly broken down into two groups: childhood and adulthood. Children and adults can be contrasted in how they act and the way they physically respond to situations
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No one wants to stray too far from home too fast‚ or become and individual overnight. We want to be able to crawl back to our parents when the tough gets going. Pulling up the roots in Gail Sheehy’s Predictable Crisis of Adulthood refers to the stage after adolescence when you should be “pulling up your roots”. Your roots in this aspect‚ is referring to your home. We try to separate our own views of the world from our families. In the process of separating our views from our parents we normally are
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account this biological imperative each create risk for cognitive decline in later adulthood. We propose that (a) engagement‚ a sustained investment in mental stimulation‚ and (b) personal agency‚ which enables one to construct a niche for successful life span development‚ constitute the centerpiece of cognitive resilience. Numerous factors at the level of the individual and the sociocultural context set the stage for engagement and agency‚ thereby contributing to life span cognitive resilience‚
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Psychosexual stage | Age | Erogenous zone | Activities | Oral stage | 0-1 | Mouth and lips | Eating‚ sucking | Anal stage | 2-3 | Anus | Defecating-toilet training | Phallic stage | 4-6 | Genitals | Oedipus and Electra complex | Latency stage | 7-12 | Sexual impulsesLie dormant | Going to school‚ play | Genital stage | 13 onwards | Genitals | Heterosexual relationships | Psychosocial crisis | Age | virtues | Trust vs. mistrust | 0-2 | Hope and optimism |
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Never Too Late Imagine getting out of high school and being faced with the grim responsibility of having to get a job. If you�re one of the fortunate‚ you have the option to continue your education and postpone the reality of growing up. Now let�s assume you�ve found that so-called dream job‚ paying your dues with hard work and late nights‚ not to mention weekends and holidays. After twenty to thirty years you�re up for retirement and it sounds It’s Never Too Late. It’s Never Too Late Imagine getting
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Running head: Psychosocial Development 8 Stages of Moral Development By: Tammy Tajeddine NTC Psychosocial Development My immediate purpose is to provide the audience with a well-researched theory on moral development according to Eric Erikson. I chose Erikson’s theory because of his passion on this topic and his research included himself. Experiencing feelings of ‘not belonging’ from early on‚ he was prompted due to questions about his own identity as he grew. I hope to give the
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Being Late Being late is unacceptable in any working environment. Every person is late at least a few times in his/her lifetime. Some people can be late occassionally due to circumtances beyond their control. Bill was late for his job presentation. Bill’s excused was because of the traffic‚ and there is an ongoing road construction that is causing the traffic. The people that Bill supposed to meet in the meeting were disappointed‚ embarrassed‚ and not willing to extend their waiting time period
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