How Dementia Affects Your Brain
Researchers Seeking Therapies for Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s Diseases
For scientists seeking therapeutic cures for brain disorders such as Alzheimer’s, drug development starts with lab work replicating the effects of the diseases.
On Personal Finance, Remember Your Roots
Popular Columnist Makes Personal Finance Relevant By Always Remembering Her Audience
Michelle Singletary of The Washington Post explains her knack for connecting with readers – often by telling the story of the grandmother who raised her.
Social Security’s Challenges
An Aging Population Will Encounter a Weakened Safety Net
The decades-long projections for the Social Security system aren’t good, but as of now, official Washington isn’t doing anything to correct them.
The Changing Long-Term Care Industry
As Population Ages, New Nursing Home Options Abound
For families dealing with long-term care decisions, the choices can be bewildering.
How Wealth Inequality Affects Retirement
The Booming Stock Markets Has Helped Some, But Many Remain Left Behind
The “recovery” of the U.S. economy means different things to different people – and the retirement security of many is at risk.
Covering Age Discrimination
Barriers Often Prevent Older Americans from the Jobs They Want – or Need
More older people are staying in the workforce, whether out of desire or necessity. How can they prevent being denied jobs simply because of their age?
Coordinating Health Care for Older Patients
How Moving From One Facility to Another Can Introduce Risk
Geriatric care expert says the health system for older people needs to learn lessons from pediatrics to prevent errors.
Rethinking the Notion of ‘Retirement’
With Rapid Technological Changes, People Will Live – and Work – Longer
Author and financial expert Ric Edelman says stopping work at age 65 won’t do when people are living into their 100s.
Federal Scientists Seek to Understand Aging Population
Research into Alzheimer’s, Hypertension, Other Health Conditions May Lead to Clues on Longevity
A top federal scientist calls recent mortality trends “disturbing” – and is pushing research to help understand them.
Understanding the ‘Fiduciary Rule’
An Important – and Contested – Change in Retirement Planning Rules
An advocate for proposed rules that financial planners would have to follow says the changes are necessary to protect consumers.
When Adult Children are Stuck in the Middle
The ‘Sandwich Generation’ is Really Much More: The ‘Club Sandwich Generation’
Aging and caregiving expert says task can be all-consuming – but also well worth it.
Public Pensions Falling Short
In State Capitals, a Wide Variation in Pension Performance
As the stock market turned erratic over the past two decades, some statehouses managed funds for retirees well while others resisted change – and underperformed.
Is a Fix to Social Security Possible?
Long-Term Trends Aren’t Good – But Political Will is Lacking
An economist who tracks the Social Security system says solutions to its solvency issues are well-known, but Congress is unlikely to act on them.
A Coming Population Boom
Move by Baby Boomers into Senior Status Will Impact Health Spending
A demographer who tracks population trends says that a coming surge in the ranks of seniors will swamp the health system.
State of Science in Alzheimer’s Research
Wave of Baby Boomers Will Balloon Alzheimer’s Cases
Face of Alzheimer’s: 5.4 million Americans, mostly 75 and older, at a price tag of $236 billion per year.
Disparities in Wealth and Savings
While Many Older People Struggle with Retirement, the Shortfall for Some Groups is Acute
An expert in wealth disparities says that African-Americans and Latinos are far behind whites in savings and have little ability to catch up.
How to Maximize Social Security Benefits
Journalists Can Help People Wade Through 2,700 Rules
If there’s a single rule for claiming Social Security benefits, it’s to be patient and wait – your payout will grow each year.
Making Finance and Aging Come Alive for Your Audience
For Reporters on Personal Finance and Aging Beats, Repetition is OK
As journalists seek to reach readers, a focus on people – and on simple messages – are key.
Living Longer, Living Better
For Aging Society, A Longevity Bonus is Just One Perk
Yes there are problems: underfunded pensions, increasing Alzheimer’s. But in some ways, getting older is getting better.
Falling Short on Retirement
As System Moved to Individual Control, People are Less Prepared
As society ages but work lives actually get shorter, retirement resources are low – and workers scrambling to catch up.
Behavioral Roadblocks to Saving for Retirement
People Have Difficulty Relating to Their Older Selves
Take the quiz: What are the biggest behavioral obstacles to saving for your retirement?
Protecting Elderly Americans’ Finances
As Older Population Grows, So Does Exploitation of It
Whether they mean well or mean ill, people who handle senior citizens’ finances often don’t act in the seniors’ best interests.
Future of Public Pensions
The “Sandwich Generation”
Challenges for Older Workers
Social Security Strategies
Retirement Spending for Real People
New Models for Living in Retirement
Long Term Care Tsunami
Paying for Health Care in Retirement
The Private Pension Story
Obstacles to Retirement for Low-Income Savers
Achieving a Secure Financial Future
Precision Medicine and Dementia
Accepting the End of Life
Attention Still Needed For Counseling Those in their Final Days
Ethicist says the U.S. health care system does a poor job discussing the reality of death and dying.
