WHAT WORRIES YOU MOST ABOUT THE FUTURE
Now let’s review what is bothering you most with your fears, what you would not like to happen
Listed below are some common fears
Things that happen
Rate your concern from
1, “ well if it happens it happens” through to
5 ”I dread this happening and try not to think about it”
You can have more than one 5 , they might all be 5s
Heart attack
Dementia
Not being able to go out by myself
Cancer
Not being able to get to the toilet in time
Stroke
Being in a home
Parkinson’s disease
Being a burden for my children
Write down other issues that make you anxious or depressed about the 80s and beyond
So how does the table look, how many fives did you have. Now let us look at the potential for preventing or delaying the problems you fear
Things that happen to many people but are not inevitable
What can be done to reduce risk and live longer better
Heart attack
Risk can be reduced – here is a link to the key part of our wellbeing programme
Dementia
There are two common causes of about equal importance; one of them – Alzheimer’s disease cannot be prevented – but is now agreed that other causes of dementia can be prevented, and the risk of dementia can be reduced
Not being able to go out by myself
This sometimes occurs as the direct result of a single condition, such as a stroke, but is also for many people the result of years of loss of fitness due to inactivity and is therefore preventable; so too is the loss of the driving licence if you keep kit and keep your vision sharp
Cancer
Some cancers are prevented by taking action after the age of sixty, including the offer of screening. Cancer is now a treatable condition.
Not being able to get to the toilet in time
Urgency, the sensation that you need to go quickly is treatable, and the time you take to get there ,whether or not you have urgency is also a factor that is under your ability to control because it, like your ability to get out and about is usually due to a progressive loss of fitness from inactivity
Stroke
The risk of stroke can be reduced at any age
Being in a home
The risk of being admitted to a home can be reduced by reducing the risk of the common diseases that lead to admission, stroke or dementia for example, and keeping physically, mentally and socially fit
Parkinson’s disease
This is not a preventable condition so you need a bit of luck to avoid it, and good treatment if you do to limit its effects
Being a burden for my children
To do this you do need, as for all these problems a little bit of luck, but by taking all the steps to prevent the common causes of severe disability you should be able to continue helping them into your 80s and 90s
Other things you want to avoid
There are many problems that occur the longer people live, not because they are caused by ageing but because they are the result of living longer in a particular environment or in a particular way. But the impact most common causes of disability and dependence on others , conditions like arthritis for example, can be either delayed or made less severe and we give the information you need in the relevant parts of the programme.
As you can see most of the things we fear can, in the words of NICE, the national Institute of Health and Care Excellence “prevent or delay [the] onset” of “dementia, disability and frailty”. NICE produced guidance for the NHS, and the public, after reviewing all the scientific evidence. So, what is next? The answer is to set your objectives and that is the next stage of your plan for Living Longer Better