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Cancer,
Incontinence, Diabetes,
Vision, Unintentional
Injuries, Heart Disease and Stroke,
Mental Health, Alzheimer's
Disease, Osteoporosis
The top
ten leading causes of death for women ages 65 or older are heart disease,
cancer, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD), and pneumonia
and influenza, diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, unintentional injuries,
kidney disease, and atherosclerosis.
Cancer
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Cancer
is the second leading cause of death for women ages 65 or older. |
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More than 50% of breast cancer cases occur in women 65 years of
age and older and as many as 50% of that population will die from
the disease. |
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Women age 65 and older are less likely to get mammograms than younger
women even though breast cancer risk increases with age.
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Ovarian cancer, the fifth leading cause of cancer death among U.S.
women, kills about 14,000 women each year.
Women age 65 or older are more likely to be diagnosed with the advanced
disease and make up almost half of all ovarian cancer cases.
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More than 10% of women 65 years of age or older smoke. Smoking is
directly responsible for 87% of all lung cancer cases each year
and the leading cause of cancer deaths in American women. |
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Ninety percent of people diagnosed with colorectal cancer are over
50 years old and approximately 90% of all colorectal cancer cases
and deaths are thought to be preventable through the use of screening
tests. |
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It is estimated that approximately 13,700 women in the U.S. will
develop invasive cervical cancer, and 4,900 women will die from
this disease. Women ages 65 and older account for nearly 25% of
all cervical cancer cases and 41% of all cervical cancer deaths
in the U.S. |
Incontinence
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Approximately
38% of women older than 60 suffer from urinary incontinence. |
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Urinary
incontinence is common among elderly women, who are often embarrassed
or convinced that involuntary loss of urine is normal with aging,
so that they are often reluctant to seek medical assistance or discuss
their problems. |
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Aging
does not cause urinary incontinence, but age-related factors such
as smaller capacity of the bladder, increased residual urine, and
involuntary bladder contractions may contribute to the condition. |
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Incontinence
predisposes patients to other health problems, contributes to depression
and social isolation, is a significant source of dependency among
the elderly, and is widely cited as a factor in nursing home admissions.
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Diabetes
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4.5
million women aged 60 years or older have diabetes, the sixth leading
cause of death for elderly women, and one-quarter of them, 1.2 million,
do not know that they have the disease. |
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Elderly
women with diabetes are particularly at risk for cardiovascular
disease, visual problems, and hypothermia and may also be at greater
risk for metabolic disorders, cognitive dysfunction, and depression. |
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Women
ages 65 and older reporting a history of diabetes were more likely
than those without the disease to report a major disability, urinary
incontinence, and impairments in hearing or vision.
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Vision
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Cataracts,
a clouding of the lens of the eye, are a leading cause of visual
impairment in the elderly and are more common in women than men.
Cataract surgery, used to alleviate this problem, is often performed
on women more frequently than men. |
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Like
cataracts, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is more common
in women than men, but for AMD, the loss of vision is irreversible
and no treatment has yet been found to save the sight of a person
affected with AMD. |
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Glaucoma
is a potentially serious eye disorder which, if left untreated,
can cause irreversible blindness. The rate of elderly women with
glaucoma rises yearly and half of those affected are unaware of
their condition. |
Unintentional
Injuries
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Falls
account for 87% of all fractures for people 65 years and older and
are the leading cause of injury deaths and the second leading cause
of spinal cord and brain injury in this age group. |
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Women
sustain 75%-80% of all hip fractures.
About one-fifth of hip fracture patients require long-term nursing
home care, and 10% remain functionally dependent for daily living
care. |
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Caucasian
women have the highest risk of fractures from falls because the
greater prevalence and severity of osteoporosis increases bone fragility
and probability of hip fracture. |
Heart
Disease and Stroke
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Older
women have the highest rates of heart attack due to their higher
rates of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity,
and physical inactivity. |
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The
percentage of women with coronary heart disease who are disabled
by their illness range from 47% in women age 65 to 74 years to 55%
in women age 75 years and older. |
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Sixty
five percent of women ages 65-74 and 79% of women ages 75 and older
have some form of cardiovascular disease. |
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Since
women are generally older when they have strokes, they are more
likely to die as a result. |
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The
chance of having a stroke more than doubles for each decade of a
woman's life after age 55. |
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Taken
together, heart disease and stroke kill nearly twice as many American
women as do all types of cancer combined. |
Mental
Health
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Depression
is not a normal part of aging, but over 58% of older adults think
it is. |
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Late-life
depression affects some six million adults, most of them women,
but only 10% of these persons ever get treated. Twice as many women
as men are diagnosed with clinical depression, which can be triggered
by other chronic illnesses common in later life such as diabetes,
stroke, heart disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, Alzheimer's
disease, Parkinson's disease, and arthritis. |
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Women
accounted for 16% of suicides among persons aged 65 and older in
1999. |
Alzheimer's
Disease
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Not
only do more women than men have Alzheimer's disease, but women
also provide a disproportionate amount of the informal community
care for people with the disease. |
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The
risk of Alzheimer's disease increases dramatically with advancing
age and many more women than men survive to the ages where Alzheimer's
disease is most common. |
Osteoporosis
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Overall,
approximately eight million American women have osteoporosis. |
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Women
are four times more likely than men to develop osteoporosis because
of the loss of estrogen, which blocks or slows down bone loss, at
menopause. |
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Over
half of all women over the age of 65 have osteoporosis and it is
usually not diagnosed until a fracture or break occurs. |
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Many
elderly women who survive hip fractures due to osteoporosis suffer
a significant compromise in quality of life. About one-fifth of
hip fracture patients require long-term nursing home care, and 10%
remain functionally dependent for daily living care. |
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Approximately
one-third of women will suffer a vertebral fracture in their middle
to late 60s, and one-third will suffer a hip fracture in their late
70s or early 80s. |
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The
best ways to prevent the loss of bone mass associated with osteoporosis
is to eat foods rich in calcium and vitamin D, do weight-bearing
exercises, stay active and mobile, don't smoke, limit alcoholic
beverages, and talk about options for drug therapy to treat bone
loss. |
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