
Bob Rosenblatt
New America Media
Itâs a scary and depressing image of aging: If you are sick or poor and over 65, itâs your own fault because you didnât do the right things when you were younger.
This is a commonly held view of old age in the United States, and the nationâs leading aging organizations are now on a fierce mission to change it through a project known as Reframing Aging.
If they fail, they fear, political support in Washington and across the nation will erode for federal spending on Social Security, Medicare, senior centers, Meals on Wheels and other programs for the 14 percent of Americans who are 65 and older (a number expected to rise to 21 percent by 2040).
An Underappreciated, Unrecognized Reality
Most older people are healthy and independent, but this reality often is âunderappreciated and unrecognized by the vast majority of the public,â said James Appleby, executive director and chief executive officer of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA).
The publicâs dark view of aging was uncovered by research from the FrameWorks Institute, a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based social issues group hired by AARP and a group of foundations. When FrameWorks interviewed Americans, it found that many started by talking about an âidealâ image of aging (happy, healthy and  financially comfortable), but ultimately reverted to their ârealâ image, focused on deterioration and helplessness.
âWhile Americans have, and are able to hold, an idealized picture of aging in their minds, this bubble is constantly and predictably perforated by what people see as a much more negative and inevitable process of deterioration,â FrameWorks said in its research.
Aging, FrameWorks added, âis understood as an inherently negative process about which little can be done. The sense of an ideal that will never be achieved serves only to further cement the already deep sense of fatalism that characterizes public thinking on aging.â
FrameWorks gave a detailed description of the relentlessly negative view of aging it uncovered at the GSAâs annual meeting last fall in Orlando, Fla. The message was alarming enough to prompt two summit meetings of groups in aging this year at the GSAâs Washington headquarters, with top officials from eight organizations, such as AARP and the National Council on Aging. And the issue has been front and center at this weekâs annual Aging in America conference run by the American Society on Aging (ASA) in Washington, D.C.
âI wouldnât say that ageism, or negative impressions of older people in general, began at any particular point, but thereâs absolutely no question it is a phenomenon that exists,â said Nancy LeaMond, executive vice president and chief advocacy and engagement officer at AARP.
The aging advocacy groups want to change the publicâs view that aging means deterioration, is an individual problem and that nothing can be done about it. To do so, they plan to launch a PR campaign persuading Americans that aging cannot only be positive, but that itâs a common societal and political necessity. If they succeed, these groups hope, voters â especially millennials â will become convinced that programs for older people deserve support.
âEverybody is eager for the tools to improve their communications as effectively as possible,â said Laura Robbins, the consulting director for the Reframing Aging project.
How to Change Perceptions and Minds
FrameWorks says the advocacy groups need a makeover of their public relations, advertising and marketing strategies. Aging, FrameWorks says, must be âunderstood as both a personal and a shared resource and opportunity, and so that older Americans are viewed as central rather than marginal participants in our collective life as a nation.â Instead of thinking of the aging population as deteriorating, incompetent and dependent, the public needs to view older Americans as living lives with opportunities and challenges.
By November, the Reframing Aging groups plan to be armed with a toolkit offering new ways to talk about aging â both internally and with the general public.
The toolkit is a first step in an ambitious campaign. âThis is an ongoing project; we are not going to produce this one report and say we are done,â said Vanessa Sink, public affairs manager for NCOA. âWe have to work together as a collective about what we are saying and how we say it.â
Among other groups in the Reframing Aging coalition are the American Federation for Aging Research, American Geriatrics Society and National Hispanic Council on Aging.
Bob Rosenblatt wrote this article for the PBS news site Next Avenue with support from the Journalists in Aging Fellowships, a program of New America Media and the Gerontological Society of America, sponsored by The SCAN Foundation.