Senior citizens are shaping the way neighbourhoods evolve and grow, all in the name of maintaining deeper connections to their communities as they age, according to one Western researcher's work inside a pair of London neighbourhoods.
"We were looking at how the built-in social environment in London either supports or holds barriers to seniors being socially engaged and participating in activities," said School of Occupational Therapy professor Carri Hand, whose work looked at Westmount and Old South neighbourhoods in London. "We focused on social connections and activities, seeing how they interacted."
Through interviews with seniors, and the use of GPS tracking to follow their movements, Hand found older adults are creating our communities through casual social interactions, helping others and taking community action. From those three areas, Hand has revealed some common truths about these particular neighbourhoods.
Seniors expressed deep connections to physical places in neighbourhoods – restaurants, cafes, parks, libraries. Everyday neighbourhood activities, such as shopping or walking, appeared key to maintaining a sense of connection to the neighbourhood and in developing informal social ties.
It turns out old people are not worthless.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 16 2017, @06:12AM
I agree. That whole decade was dreary
What most think of as The '60s ended around 1975 (Nixon quit).
When I think of the '70s, I think of people dressing up again[1] and touching each other when they danced.[2]
Saturday Night Fever was documenting a thing that had been going on a while.
(They started filming that in March of 1977 and it was released in December.)
[1] OK, so there was a lot of polyester involved.
[2] ...and I don't mean just clinching and swaying on slow tunes.
I mean real dances with each partner having a defined role in the lead-and-follow thing.
-- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]