What are 10 recommendations you would make to an older person to maintain their body as healthy as possible?

In the last census baby boomers, those 65+, accounted for 13% of the population. This age group grew at a faster rate than the population under age 45, and it's clear that the US is an aging population. Happily, aging is different now than it was for our parents and grandparents. Today, there are more people living longer than at any other time in history. In fact, boomers will number 78 million by 2030. "This generation, associated with social change including the civil rights and anti-war movements in the 1960s, has another important cause ”staying healthy," says soon-to-be 65-year-old Arthur Hayward, MD, a geriatrician and clinical lead physician for Kaiser Permanente. "We need to become activists in promoting healthful behaviors and try our best to remain active and healthy the rest of our lives."

How to do it? Dr. Hayward recommends these 10 easy health tips for seniors to help baby boomers live longer and thrive:

    1. Quit smoking. Take this critical step to improve your health and combat aging. Smoking kills by causing cancer, strokes and heart failure. Smoking leads to erectile dysfunction in men due to atherosclerosis and to excessive wrinkling by attacking skin elasticity. Many resources are available to help you quit.
    2. Keep active. Do something to keep fit each day—something you enjoy that maintains strength, balance and flexibility and promotes cardiovascular health. Physical activity helps you stay at a healthy weight, prevent or control illness, sleep better, reduce stress, avoid falls and look and feel better, too.
    3. Eat well. Combined with physical activity, eating nutritious foods in the right amounts can help keep you healthy. Many illnesses, such as heart disease, obesity, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and osteoporosis, can be prevented or controlled with dietary changes and exercise. Calcium and vitamin D supplements can help women prevent osteoporosis.
  1. Maintain a healthy weight. Extra weight increases your risk for heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. Use the Kaiser Permanente BMI [body mass index] calculator to find out what you should weigh for your height. Get to your healthy weight and stay there by eating right and keeping active. Replace sugary drinks with water—water is calorie free!
  2. Prevent falls. We become vulnerable to falls as we age. Prevent falls and injury by removing loose carpet or throw rugs. Keep paths clear of electrical cords and clutter, and use night-lights in hallways and bathrooms. Did you know that people who walk barefoot fall more frequently? Wear shoes with good support to reduce the risk of falling.
  3. Stay up-to-date on immunizations and other health screenings. By age 50, women should begin mammography screening for breast cancer. Men can be checked for prostate cancer. Many preventive screenings are available. Those who are new to Medicare are entitled to a "Welcome to Medicare" visit and all Medicare members to an annual wellness visit. Use these visits to discuss which preventative screenings and vaccinations are due.
  4. Prevent skin cancer. As we age, our skin grows thinner; it becomes drier and less elastic. Wrinkles appear, and cuts and bruises take longer to heal. Be sure to protect your skin from the sun. Too much sun and ultraviolet rays can cause skin cancer.
  5. Get regular dental, vision and hearing checkups. Your teeth and gums will last a lifetime if you care for them properly that means daily brushing and flossing and getting regular dental checkups. By age 50, most people notice changes to their vision, including a gradual decline in the ability to see small print or focus on close objects. Common eye problems that can impair vision include cataracts and glaucoma. Hearing loss occurs commonly with aging, often due to exposure to loud noise.
  6. Manage stress. Try exercise or relaxation techniques—perhaps meditation or yoga as a means of coping. Make time for friends and social contacts and fun. Successful coping can affect our health and how we feel. Learn the role of positive thinking.
  7. Fan the flame. When it comes to sexual intimacy and aging, age is no reason to limit your sexual enjoyment. Learn about physical changes that come with aging and get suggestions to help you adjust to them, if necessary.

This is the second in a series of posts explaining my Healthy Aging Checklist.

Remember, for the healthiest aging we need to do the things that optimize health — and health care — so that the brain and body work at their best for now, and for the future.

I’ve identified six broad actions to take:

The Healthy Aging Checklist:

  • Promote brain health and emotional well-being.
  • Promote physical health.
  • Check for and address common senior health problems [e.g. falls, pain, memory problems, depression, isolation, incontinence, polypharmacy, etc].
  • Learn to optimize the management of any chronic conditions.
  • Get recommended preventive health services for older adults.
  • Address medical, legal, and financial advance care planning.

In this post, we’ll cover proven ways to promote and maintain physical health as one ages.

6 Proven Ways to Promote Physical Health

Here are the six “healthy living” actions that I recommend, for promoting physical health in all older adults. They all have a solid track record [which cannot be said for everything I see recommended online]. They are also good “bang-for-the-buck,” in part because they provide real benefits to just about everyone who adopts them. And they help whether or not an older person has already developed chronic illnesses.

Now, the truth is that many of these overlap with the recommended actions for brain health. But I’ve tried to provide more links and resources related to how these actions benefit aspects of physical health such as mobility, heart health, and immune function.

Get Your Free Physical Health Cheatsheet! The 6 actions to maintain physical health in a handy PDF checklist that you can print or save. Includes useful resources for each action item. Click here now.

1. Exercise regularly.

Why: Exercise helps older adults maintain their strength and mobility, plus it improves just about every physical health outcome you can imagine, provided you don’t overdo it or get injured.

A 2014 research study in JAMA  found that a structured exercise program — involving sedentary adults aged 70-89 —  reduced the risk of “major mobility disability.” Exercise also tends to improve mood, which has positive effects on the rest of the body.

Note: Research has shown that even less-than-recommended exercise brings health benefits. So remember: it’s better to do a little bit every day than nothing at all. In fact, the most important thing is to find something that you can keep doing. Walking is relatively easy for many. Otherwise, classes or structured courses often help older adults stick with an exercise program.

If you are already exercising regularly, the next step is to try to incorporate all four different types of exercise that benefit older adults: strength, endurance, balance, flexibility. You can learn more at Go4Life below.

For more information:

  • How Exercise Helps Aging Adults: Key points from a landmark study
  • How much physical activity do older adults need? [CDC.gov]
  • Get Started, from Go4Life [National Institute on Aging]

2. Don’t smoke.

Why: Smoking is bad for just about every aspect of physical health. It’s especially damaging to the lungs, but also increases the risk of heart attacks, strokes, and various forms of cancer. Many tobacco-related diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, can cause difficult symptoms for years.

Fortunately, even after a senior has developed smoking-related health problems, quitting smoking will reduce symptoms and one’s chance of a premature death: one study found that quitting smoking between ages 55-64 added four years to one’s life expectancy.

Note: Quitting smoking is hard, since nicotine is physically and psychologically addictive. Only 3-6% of people who try to quit on their own succeed. Medications and counseling have been proven to help quit smoking; combining these correctly usually increases the chance of successfully quitting to 30%. Many people need to try quitting a few times, so don’t let a past failure to quit stop you from trying again.

For more information:

  • Quitting Smoking for Older Adults [National Institute on Aging]
  • Never Too Late To Quit Smoking: CVD Mortality Reduced When Patients Quit After Age 60
  • Get Free Help: Speak to an Expert [Smokefree.gov]

3. Get enough sleep. 

Why: Studies have found that chronic sleep deprivation is linked to increased cardiovascular disease, increased levels of inflammatory blood markers, and decreased immune function. Being sleep-deprived also causes fatigue, which can make it hard to be physically active [and is bad for mood, too].

Note:  Aging does cause sleep to become lighter and more fragmented, and may cause people to need a little less sleep than when they were younger. That said, chronic sleep difficulties or often waking up feeling tired is not normal in aging. Older adults often suffer from true sleep problems that can be treated once they are properly evaluated.

For more information:

  • How Sleep Affects Health, & Changes With Aging
  • 5 Top Causes of Sleep Problems in Seniors, & Proven Ways to Treat Insomnia
  • How to Sleep Well as You Age

4. Avoid chronic stress.

Why: Feeling chronically stressed has been linked to physical health problems such as cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, and decreased immune function. Research suggests that this may be because stress can accelerate “cellular aging,” and also may promote inflammatory markers in the body.

Note: Common causes of stress in older adults include financial stress, relationship stress, work-related stress, and caregiving stress. To reduce chronic stress, it’s best to combine general approaches [such as improving sleep, exercising, meditation, relaxation strategies, etc] with approaches that can help you cope with your specific source of stress.

For more information:

  • How stress affects your health
  • Accelerated telomere shortening in response to life stress
  • Stress Management: How to Reduce, Prevent, and Cope with Stress

5. Maintain a healthy weight.

Why: The main reason is that obesity is a major risk factor for disability in late life. [Strange but true: as people get older the link between obesity and premature death gets weaker, a phenomenon sometimes called the “obesity paradox in aging.”]

Obesity — usually defined as having a body mass index [BMI] of 30 or more — worsens arthritis. It’s also been linked to many health problems, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and glucose intolerance, certain types of cancer, and sleep-related breathing disorders.

Studies have found that when overweight or obese people lose even a modest amount of weight — such as 5-7% of one’s current weight — this can improve physical health and symptoms. 

Do keep in mind that unintentional weight loss is a major red flag  when it comes to the health of older adults, and should always be brought to the attention of health professionals.

Note: Historically a low-fat diet has been recommended for weight loss and health reasons. However, I believe there’s a lot to be said for the theory that high-carbohydrate foods [which are often low-fat] increase insulin levels, promote hunger, and make it harder for people to lose weight. If you need to lose weight, you may want to do some research into various approaches before discussing with your doctor and coming to your own conclusions as to which weight-loss strategy to try. Older adults need to be especially careful about not losing too much lean body mass during intentional weight loss.

For more information:

  • Obesity in the elderly: More complicated than you think
  • Rethinking Weight Loss and the Reasons We’re “Always Hungry”
  • Weight Loss, Exercise, or Both and Physical Function in Obese Older Adults

6. Eat a “healthy diet.”

Why: We know that for many people, the way they eat can affect certain aspects of physical health. A healthy diet is one that doesn’t provoke negative health effects, such as being prone to take on extra weight, develop insulin resistance, develop atherosclerosis, or have uncomfortable symptoms in the belly or bowels.

Frail older people may also need extra calories and protein, since malnutrition becomes more common as people age.

Note: Exactly what should or shouldn’t be eaten, as part of a healthy diet, is being constantly debated among experts and the general public. As the effect of diet on a person is very individual, it’s important to follow how one’s body seems to respond to a given diet. [Pay attention to how you feel, how your weight changes, and how your blood sugar and lipids change.] In general, research suggests that a diet high in fiber and low in saturated fat and added sugars — such as the Mediterranean diet — is a good choice for many.

For more information:

  • How to Follow the Mediterranean Diet for Senior Health, & Related Research Findings
  • Simple Rules for Healthy Eating
  • 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans [Executive Summary from Health.gov]
  • Healthy Eating As We Age

An Optional Extra Way to Promote Physical Health

7. Tinker with your nutrition and your microbiome

Why: Recent research suggests that a person’s health can be significantly influenced by the bacterial community [the microbiome] we all carry within our guts and in our body. The microbiome itself seems to be influenced by one’s diet as well as by other factors.

On the other hand, it’s not clear that taking extra vitamins and supplements — including popular anti-oxidants — promote health. The 2014 US Preventive Services task force report on this topic concluded the evidence of benefit is weak. Furthermore, commercially available supplements have often been found to be of poor quality, and “anti-aging” vitamins have no evidence behind them. To promote physical health, I believe the microbiome will prove to be much more important than tinkering with supplements.

Note: It is not yet clear how we should advise people to optimize their microbiome, other than to eat a lot of fiber and minimize antibiotics. For some people, eliminating certain foods seems to improve well-being or certain symptoms. Research into the benefits of fermented foods and probiotics is ongoing. There is also fascinating research being done on how the microbiome changes with aging, and might influence certain aspects of the body’s aging.

For more information:

  • To be healthy, take care of your microbiome
  • Vitamin D: The Healthy Aging Dose to Prevent Deficiency & FAQs
  • Vitamins and Minerals in Aging

What’s Your Plan for Promoting Physical Health While Aging?

So that’s my short list of activities that are most important to do, to promote physical health while aging.

Which of these are you already doing, and which of these will you try to work on in the next few months?

Also, if you think I’ve missed anything major in the list [it has to be something with good evidence and that works for virtually all older adults], please let me know in the comments below.

Get Your Free Physical Health Cheatsheet! The 6 actions to maintain physical health in a handy PDF checklist that you can print or save. Includes useful resources for each action item. Click here now.

What are 5 recommendations you would make to an older person to maintain their body as healthily as possible?

6 Proven Ways to Promote Physical Health.
Exercise regularly..
Don't smoke..
Get enough sleep..
Avoid chronic stress..
Maintain a healthy weight..
Eat a “healthy diet.”.
Tinker with your nutrition and your microbiome..

What are the 10 things that should be considered in maintaining a healthy body?

Here are 20 practical health tips to help you start off towards healthy living in 2020..
Eat a healthy diet..
Consume less salt and sugar..
Reduce intake of harmful fats..
Avoid harmful use of alcohol..
Don't smoke..
Be active..
Check your blood pressure regularly..
Get tested..

What are the recommended health practices for older adults?

Here is a quick checklist to help maintain good health as you age..
Don't forget your well visits and recommended screenings. ... .
Exercise and stay active. ... .
Maintain strong bones. ... .
Don't let joint pain slow you down. ... .
Eat a heart healthy diet. ... .
Take care of your eyes. ... .
Make sure your hearing is loud and clear. ... .
Keep a skip in your step..

What can older adults do to help maintain their health and strength?

As an older adult, regular physical activity is one of the most important things you can do for your health. It can prevent or delay many of the health problems that seem to come with age. It also helps your muscles grow stronger so you can keep doing your day-to-day activities without becoming dependent on others.

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