By Jung Eun Lee, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
June 29,2008
Dr. Veronika Steenpass recalls the time two years ago when an 81-year-old woman arrived at Grady Hospital complaining of unexplained weight loss.
The woman had lost 20 pounds in six months. A thorough round of lab tests was ordered. When the results of the tests came back, Dr. Steenpass had to tell a woman old enough to be her grandmother that she was HIV-positive.
In the last 10 years, the number of newly diagnosed HIV/AIDS cases in Georgia in people over 50 has nearly doubled, according to data from the state Department of Human Resources (DHR) Division of Public Health. In 1998, there were 189 new cases of HIV/AIDS in that age group and by 2007, the number was 341, which was 15 percent of all newly diagnosed HIV/AIDS cases in Georgia.
"What accounts for these numbers is a mixture of patients infected previously who are presenting late in the course of the disease as well as patients with high-risk activities who are getting infected later in life," said Dr. David Rimland, chief of infectious diseases at the Atlanta VA Medical Center and a professor of medicine at Emory.
At the Atlanta VA Medical Center HIV Clinic, which serves a predominantly male population, Rimland said in the last few years patients over 50 have accounted for about two-thirds of new HIV/AIDS cases.
Similarly, in the first three months of this year, 38 patients at Grady Hospital were newly diagnosed with HIV/AIDS. Fifteen of these patients, nearly 40 percent, were over 50.
"In this age group, they get very little information about HIV and how to protect themselves," said Steenpass, who is finishing her residency at Emory.
That might be changing. AID Atlanta, a nonprofit that offers HIV/AIDS services, is getting more calls for educational programs for seniors at high-rises, nursing homes and church settings, said Neena Smith-Bankhead, director of education and volunteer services.
The CDC currently recommends HIV screening in individuals up to age 64. However, a study published in this month's Annals of Internal Medicine found that screening may be cost-effective up to age 75.
"Age alone should not be a contraindication for HIV screening," said the study's author, Dr. Gillian Sanders, associate professor of medicine at Duke University. She said increased screening in older adults could reduce the stigma of getting tested and reduce transmissions by allowing affected individuals to modify their behaviors.
Some patients who know they are HIV-positive may continue to participate in high-risk activities, Rimland said. "You'd like to think that everyone who is HIV-positive would be careful with their actions, but unfortunately that's not true." He stressed the importance of safe-sex practices in any age group.
When it comes to HIV screening, seniors are the least likely of all age groups to get tested.
"They may not realize that unless they ask specifically for the HIV test, they won't get the test done nor will they know their HIV status," said Teresa Kochinsky-Bell, health program representative for the Fulton County Health Department's Communicable Disease Prevention Branch. "Just because the doctor draws your blood doesn't mean they're testing you for HIV."
The state of Georgia requires patients to sign a formal written consent form before they can have HIV testing, with the exception of pregnant women.
The CDC HIV testing guidelines, however, recommend "opt-out" HIV screening, which means health care providers don't need separate consent to test for HIV. The patient still has a right to decline.
"A lot of times, HIV and other STDs (sexually transmitted disease) just aren't discussed between older patients and their doctors," Steenpass said. "It may be from a stereotype that older people are not sexually active."
Like many stereotypes, this one is not true. Almost three-quarters of 57- to 64-year-olds reported that they were sexually active, according to a study published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine. As people aged, sexual activity did decline, though even up to age 85, a quarter of individuals in the study reported being sexually active.
Media advertising of erectile dysfunction treatments such as Viagra and Cialis has brought the subject of sex and older people into mainstream conversation.
"When you're already talking to your 75-year-old patient about erectile dysfunction, wouldn't that be a great time to talk about their sexual behavior and assess their risk for STDs," said Dr. Ted Johnson, a geriatrician at the Atlanta VA Medical Center and an associate professor of medicine at Emory.
Johnson's average patient is 80; few studies characterize sexual behavior in this patient population.
"There is still no good national campaign out there to alert older people they're at the same risk for contracting HIV if they don't understand transmission and prevention," said Jane Fowler, 73, a retired journalist and founder of the advocacy organization HIV Wisdom for Older Women, based in Kansas.
Fowler, like many in her age group, was already in a committed relationship when the first cases of HIV/AIDS were reported. After the end of a 24-year marriage, Fowler began a relationship with a friend she had known and trusted her entire adult life, and from whom, she later found, she contracted HIV.
"The fact is that none of us know the sexual history of anyone but ourselves," Fowler said. "Older people think this is just a disease of young people, but that's not the case."
Several studies of women performed at Grady Hospital found that older women knew less about HIV/AIDS than their younger counterparts and had little interest in knowing their HIV status.
"Because older women are postmenopausal, they know they can't get pregnant, but they also think they can't get anything," said Lisa Bernstein, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, who authored the studies. "We as health care providers are not educating this population, so their perceived risk is very low compared to the reality."
Barbara Revell, 53, of Cobb County, however, said many people over 50 do know a lot about HIV/AIDS and do take precautions if they decide to engage in sex.
"I saw people I knew die from HIV at the start of the epidemic, and that's the best education a person could get on the need to protect themselves," she said.
Revell has been on the dating scene in Atlanta for nine years and heads a social club for singles over 40. She said she has been tested in the past and sees it as something that should be as routine as having a mammogram.
Last year's DHR state data from newly diagnosed patients over 50 showed that twice as many men as women were infected.
The majority of these people, of either sex, could not identify any behavioral risk factor in themselves or their partners, meaning they did not know how they got the virus.
OUR MISSION
SageHealth Network is dedicated to promoting the sexual health, socialization and positive aging of older adults and seniors. We offer unique health promotion workshops and social events focusing on older adults and seniors' needs and overall wellbeing.
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
New Condom, HIV Tests for NYC Elderly

The Associated Press
July 25, 2007
While volunteers passed out cups of Jell-O to the white-haired lunch crowd at a senior center, another group was distributing something that didn’t quite fit amid the card games and daily gossip: condoms.
“You’re giving out condoms,” 82-year-old Rose Crescenzo said with a wistful smile, “but who’s going to give us a guy?”
But this was no joke.
The condom giveaway is part of an effort by New York City’s Department of Aging to educate older people about the risks of contracting the virus that causes AIDS. After the condom giveaway, free HIV testing was offered.
AIDS education of the elderly has become an important issue as antiretroviral drugs that can keep patients living into their golden years changes the face of AIDS. Experts warn that ignorance about HIV among seniors can lead to new infections.
And those infections are happening. A physician from Howard University Hospital in Washington recently diagnosed unsuspected HIV in an 82-year-old.
So HIV educators are taking their message of prevention to senior centers and other locales where older people meet. They also hope to create a welcoming environment for people who already have the virus.
Sex doesn’t end at 32
New York City has the most HIV cases of any U.S. city — nearly 100,000 — and is considered a leader in the area of AIDS education for seniors, with the City Council having budgeted $1 million toward HIV education for older people.
But smaller-scale campaigns are also under way elsewhere.
Nancy Orel, a professor of gerontology at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, is organizing a workshop for seniors that will include free condoms and HIV tests.
“Unfortunately, most individuals have the perception that sex ends at, what, 32?” Orel said. “And many older adults report that when they go to see their physicians, the physicians don’t ask if they’re sexually active.”
The program at the Peter Cardella Senior Center would have been unthinkable back when AIDS was known as a disease that strikes its victims young and kills them in their prime. But the aging of America’s AIDS population has changed that.
“Often older people do not concern themselves with HIV and AIDS because they assume that they are not at risk, and that can be a tragic mistake,” said Edwin Mendez-Santiago, New York City’s commissioner of aging.
Frank Garcia, 72, happily pocketed his supply of official New York City condoms, which are packaged with a subway logo.
“I think it’s a great thing,” he said. “We used to go to the drugstore and wait for an hour or two before we got up the nerve to ask for them. Your parents didn’t talk about it. Everything was street-taught.”
‘The silent epidemic’
A study last year by the AIDS Community Research Initiative of America projected that within the next decade, the majority of HIV-infected New Yorkers will be over 50.
Dan Tietz, executive director of the AIDS research group, said HIV education is needed at senior centers, where the average age is more like 70, because “we know that people are still having sex well past 65.”
Dorcas Baker, who directs an AIDS education center in Baltimore, said health officials there began HIV prevention programs at senior centers in 2005.
“We call it the silent epidemic because no one thinks seniors are sexual or that they’re using drugs,” she said.
Some seniors tell AIDS educators the disease doesn’t affect them because they are not having sex.
“We challenge them by saying, ‘You’re a grandmother, you’re a mother, you’re a sister, you’re a neighbor,”’ Baker said. “They can also help to raise awareness even if they’re not active themselves.”
People aged 50 to 64 accounted for 14 percent of new HIV diagnoses in 2005, while those over 65 comprised only about 2 percent of HIV diagnoses, according to Dr. Bernard Branson, associate director for laboratory diagnostics in the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
At the Peter Cardella Center in Queens, 66-year-old AIDS educator Edward Shaw recounted his own 1988 diagnosis and warned: “If you’re still having sex, you need to know about HIV/AIDS.”
Many of the seniors ignored him as they chatted with friends and settled in for pork chops and green beans.
“I think it should be done in areas where it’s really needed,” said Julia Karcher, 82. “These ladies are all by themselves for years and years and years.”
But Marie Tarantino, who gave her age as “39-plus,” said lonely seniors might take unwise risks.
“They might pick somebody up on the street,” she said. “They just think that at a certain age they can’t get pregnant. They don’t think they could get a sexually transmitted disease.”
And Crescenzo, who lost her husband of 62 years last October, did take the condoms.
“If I get a date,” she said, “I’m going to use one of these.”
Thursday, June 19, 2008
UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS (UNGASS) Indicators: Where are the Over-50s?
June 2008
HIV/AIDS and older persons are rarely mentioned together. Writers and readers alike assume that older persons don't engage in sex and have no need to learn about "protected sex." This blind spot means that millions of older people are left out of international and national policy and education about HIV/AIDS and its transmission, thus limiting the HIV/AIDS response.
For the full report by HelpAge, click on this link:
http://ent.groundspring.org/EmailNow/pub.php?module=URLTracker&cmd=track&j=217952942&u=2254329
HIV/AIDS and older persons are rarely mentioned together. Writers and readers alike assume that older persons don't engage in sex and have no need to learn about "protected sex." This blind spot means that millions of older people are left out of international and national policy and education about HIV/AIDS and its transmission, thus limiting the HIV/AIDS response.
For the full report by HelpAge, click on this link:
http://ent.groundspring.org/EmailNow/pub.php?module=URLTracker&cmd=track&j=217952942&u=2254329
Tips for online dating
June is Seniors Month
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS
If you are a senior who wants to get back into the dating game, the Internet is a great way to get started, said Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company for seniors.
Here are some tips Cauch recommends to keep seniors' online dating experience safe and enjoyable.
Six rules to smart online safety:
• Guard your privacy
Don't allow yourself to be exploited or taken advantage of.
Use caution when revealing personal information, particularly your address, phone number, income and whether you own a home.
• Take it slow
You can't hurry love. Take as much time as you need to get to know someone before you meet in person. Don't feel pressured to move quickly.
• Speak on the phone before meeting
Talking on the phone helps to establish chemistry and will help you decide if you'd like to take it to the next level and meet in person.
• Meet in public places
This is an unalterable rule. Restaurants, coffee shops and parks are good choices, and you should always inform someone you know where you're going and with whom.
• Pictures can lie
Unfortunately, people do lie and can make pictures lie, too. Don't place too much trust in a photo. Just because your online date looks like Sean Connery or Sophia Loren doesn't mean they will in person.
• Online dating is an accelerated form of meeting people
You need to be careful in online dating just as in real life. You can have fun but be careful. Always use common sense.
Visit www.sagehealthnetwork.com for details and more tips.
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS
If you are a senior who wants to get back into the dating game, the Internet is a great way to get started, said Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company for seniors.
Here are some tips Cauch recommends to keep seniors' online dating experience safe and enjoyable.
Six rules to smart online safety:
• Guard your privacy
Don't allow yourself to be exploited or taken advantage of.
Use caution when revealing personal information, particularly your address, phone number, income and whether you own a home.
• Take it slow
You can't hurry love. Take as much time as you need to get to know someone before you meet in person. Don't feel pressured to move quickly.
• Speak on the phone before meeting
Talking on the phone helps to establish chemistry and will help you decide if you'd like to take it to the next level and meet in person.
• Meet in public places
This is an unalterable rule. Restaurants, coffee shops and parks are good choices, and you should always inform someone you know where you're going and with whom.
• Pictures can lie
Unfortunately, people do lie and can make pictures lie, too. Don't place too much trust in a photo. Just because your online date looks like Sean Connery or Sophia Loren doesn't mean they will in person.
• Online dating is an accelerated form of meeting people
You need to be careful in online dating just as in real life. You can have fun but be careful. Always use common sense.
Visit www.sagehealthnetwork.com for details and more tips.
Sexually transmitted infections are on the rise for seniors
June is Seniors Month
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS Scarborough Mirror
Seniors who have been out of the dating game have a new set of things to think about.
While they don't have to worry about getting pregnant any more, sexually transmitted infections are on the rise for older people.
Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company that hosts workshops for seniors, said there are many reasons for this, including people not using protection.
"Just because they're (seniors) beyond child-bearing years people aren't using condoms, they think 'Why should I use condoms I'm not going to get pregnant, I'm 75'...," she said.
Another reason is that 50 years ago, diseases were curable and AIDS was not an issue.
Cauch said the number of HIV cases are also going up because individuals with the disease are living longer and are aging with their illness.
"So there are people acquiring sexually transmitted infections later in life because they're not practising safe sex but there are also people who have acquired STIs earlier in life and they're living longer," Cauch said.
Another interesting fact to note is that with the advent of Viagra, there has been an increase in older married women getting sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
"A lot of these older men are taking Viagra and then cheating on their spouses, pick up an STD and bring it back to their wives," Cauch said
Caution aside, Cauch said senior dating is often more about meeting friends and having companionship more than it is about dating and having sex in the traditional sense. That's because some seniors may have mobility issues and medication can affect desire and ability.
"With respect to sexuality, seniors I think have a different interpretation about what sex is," Cauch said. "It may not be penetrative sex but it's more what I like to call outercourse."
Ruth Goodman, senior social worker at Baycrest Geriatric Health Care Centre in North York, said sexuality and intimacy should definitely be present in a senior's life, but it should be defined more broadly.
"Intercourse is not the only way to be close to someone, ... it's affection, touch, hugging, kissing caressing. With older people where there may be certain physical losses so it means lovemaking takes a different shape," Goodman said.
Whether you're 65 or 95, Goodman said the richer your social network is the better off you will be. Because seniors go through a number of mental and physical changes, a great support system will help them to better navigate through those changes and be more resilient.
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS Scarborough Mirror
Seniors who have been out of the dating game have a new set of things to think about.
While they don't have to worry about getting pregnant any more, sexually transmitted infections are on the rise for older people.
Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company that hosts workshops for seniors, said there are many reasons for this, including people not using protection.
"Just because they're (seniors) beyond child-bearing years people aren't using condoms, they think 'Why should I use condoms I'm not going to get pregnant, I'm 75'...," she said.
Another reason is that 50 years ago, diseases were curable and AIDS was not an issue.
Cauch said the number of HIV cases are also going up because individuals with the disease are living longer and are aging with their illness.
"So there are people acquiring sexually transmitted infections later in life because they're not practising safe sex but there are also people who have acquired STIs earlier in life and they're living longer," Cauch said.
Another interesting fact to note is that with the advent of Viagra, there has been an increase in older married women getting sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
"A lot of these older men are taking Viagra and then cheating on their spouses, pick up an STD and bring it back to their wives," Cauch said
Caution aside, Cauch said senior dating is often more about meeting friends and having companionship more than it is about dating and having sex in the traditional sense. That's because some seniors may have mobility issues and medication can affect desire and ability.
"With respect to sexuality, seniors I think have a different interpretation about what sex is," Cauch said. "It may not be penetrative sex but it's more what I like to call outercourse."
Ruth Goodman, senior social worker at Baycrest Geriatric Health Care Centre in North York, said sexuality and intimacy should definitely be present in a senior's life, but it should be defined more broadly.
"Intercourse is not the only way to be close to someone, ... it's affection, touch, hugging, kissing caressing. With older people where there may be certain physical losses so it means lovemaking takes a different shape," Goodman said.
Whether you're 65 or 95, Goodman said the richer your social network is the better off you will be. Because seniors go through a number of mental and physical changes, a great support system will help them to better navigate through those changes and be more resilient.
Intimacy is important in the lives of seniors
June is Seniors Month
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS Scarborough Mirror
Whether we like it or not it happens to each of us: we get older.
If we're lucky, we will live long enough to survive our golden years enjoying retirement and with a rich personal life. That's right, a personal life.
Nowhere does it say that when we hit a certain age that our desire to be in an intimate relationship with a special someone diminishes. But that is one of the misconceptions of seniors - they don't date, let alone have sex.
"People cannot put those two concepts together (seniors and dating)," said Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company that hosts workshops for seniors. "They cannot imagine it and if they do they're disgusted by it and it's so pathetic, and it's sad and discouraging."
Cauch said she hopes that through her work with the SageHealth Network she'll change those misconceptions about seniors.
"We're all going to get older and for God sake's if anyone judges me because of how I look because I have wrinkles or grey hair, I think that's horrible, you're really dehumanizing a person because of their age," she said.
Ruth Goodman, senior social worker at Baycrest Geriatric Health Care Centre in North York, agreed. She said many people have stereotypes about seniors, with the impression they are somehow different when it comes to love.
"There is a lot of misunderstanding and gender bias as well," she said. "If older men have grey hair that's an attribute, but a woman with grey hair is seen as somehow losing her sexuality and that's unfair."
According to Statistics Canada, the 65-plus age group accounts for 13.1 per cent of Canada's total population, which means, Cauch said, for the first time ever this country will have more older than younger people. By 2050, that number will be at 26.3 per cent.
This number can be attributed to people living longer, advances in medicine and healthier lifestyles, and, Cauch said, a solid emotional and social life certainly adds to that longevity.
Goodman said meeting a new person, having someone being interested in you and having fun are things many older people are hungry for and it contributes to their general emotional well-being.
"Some things are core for everyone no matter the age and that is you want to be acknowledged, validated, and we get that through our relationships," Goodman said. "These things are lifelong, the need to love and be loved, cared about and wanted."
That's not to say that seniors may not face challenges.
For example, if a person has been out of the dating game for awhile she may not only may not only be hesitant, but out of practice.
Goodman said once a senior is ready to date again, the No. 1 thing to do is be socially involved so you have the opportunity to meet people.
Cauch's workshops touch upon all kinds of topics, including the best places for seniors to meet people.
"Volunteering, it's a great way to feel good about yourself and give back to the community; special interest classes; there's going out with friends; faith-based groups; singles travel, which is huge right now; and senior centres," Cauch said.
One area that has exploded, Cauch said, is online dating for seniors, which recently has expanded to include online speed dating.
Goodman also suggested meeting people at church or synagogue, as any social gathering equals opportunity.
That being said, if a senior has been absent from the dating game for 30 to 50 years, some things have changed.
June 11, 2008 09:23 AM
MARIA TZAVARAS Scarborough Mirror
Whether we like it or not it happens to each of us: we get older.
If we're lucky, we will live long enough to survive our golden years enjoying retirement and with a rich personal life. That's right, a personal life.
Nowhere does it say that when we hit a certain age that our desire to be in an intimate relationship with a special someone diminishes. But that is one of the misconceptions of seniors - they don't date, let alone have sex.
"People cannot put those two concepts together (seniors and dating)," said Michele Cauch, executive director of SageHealth Network, a Toronto-based sexual health promotion and education company that hosts workshops for seniors. "They cannot imagine it and if they do they're disgusted by it and it's so pathetic, and it's sad and discouraging."
Cauch said she hopes that through her work with the SageHealth Network she'll change those misconceptions about seniors.
"We're all going to get older and for God sake's if anyone judges me because of how I look because I have wrinkles or grey hair, I think that's horrible, you're really dehumanizing a person because of their age," she said.
Ruth Goodman, senior social worker at Baycrest Geriatric Health Care Centre in North York, agreed. She said many people have stereotypes about seniors, with the impression they are somehow different when it comes to love.
"There is a lot of misunderstanding and gender bias as well," she said. "If older men have grey hair that's an attribute, but a woman with grey hair is seen as somehow losing her sexuality and that's unfair."
According to Statistics Canada, the 65-plus age group accounts for 13.1 per cent of Canada's total population, which means, Cauch said, for the first time ever this country will have more older than younger people. By 2050, that number will be at 26.3 per cent.
This number can be attributed to people living longer, advances in medicine and healthier lifestyles, and, Cauch said, a solid emotional and social life certainly adds to that longevity.
Goodman said meeting a new person, having someone being interested in you and having fun are things many older people are hungry for and it contributes to their general emotional well-being.
"Some things are core for everyone no matter the age and that is you want to be acknowledged, validated, and we get that through our relationships," Goodman said. "These things are lifelong, the need to love and be loved, cared about and wanted."
That's not to say that seniors may not face challenges.
For example, if a person has been out of the dating game for awhile she may not only may not only be hesitant, but out of practice.
Goodman said once a senior is ready to date again, the No. 1 thing to do is be socially involved so you have the opportunity to meet people.
Cauch's workshops touch upon all kinds of topics, including the best places for seniors to meet people.
"Volunteering, it's a great way to feel good about yourself and give back to the community; special interest classes; there's going out with friends; faith-based groups; singles travel, which is huge right now; and senior centres," Cauch said.
One area that has exploded, Cauch said, is online dating for seniors, which recently has expanded to include online speed dating.
Goodman also suggested meeting people at church or synagogue, as any social gathering equals opportunity.
That being said, if a senior has been absent from the dating game for 30 to 50 years, some things have changed.
Sunday, June 8, 2008
Looking for love, or....
The Globe and Mail did a feature on aging last week. One section took a look at seniors and dating at the Terraces of Baycrest in Toronto, Ontario. The article and video focuses on the challenges of dating and the disproportionate ration of men to women. With women numbering 4 to 1, finding a mate is difficult due to supply and demand.
To see original link and watch video, click on this link: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080520.wretirement3/BNStory/retirement/?pageRequested=all&print=true
-----------------------------
Looking for love, or.....
The equipment may be rusty, but you can still get lusty. And the desire for companionship never fades. Reporter Rebecca Dube and photographer Kevin Van Paassen watch sparks fly
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
May 28, 2008 at 12:00 AM EDT
Seymour Hersch has been dating the same woman for five years. He thinks she would love to get married; all he has to do is ask.
But marriage would only cramp his style – he would have to drop the other three women he's been seeing. He met some of his girlfriends through friends and family, others through an online dating service.
“They might be jealous, but I don't care,” he says. “I make it very clear I'm not interested in getting married.”
Just another commitment-shy bachelor – except Mr. Hersch is 77 and lives in a retirement home.
They may move more slowly than they did in their prime, but old people have still got moves. The number of Canadians 65 and older is set to double over the next three decades, and people are living longer and staying fit longer than ever before. They're still dating, hooking up and looking for love.
That's certainly true of Mr. Hersch, whose gap-toothed grin has become a flirtatious fixture at the Terraces of Baycrest since he moved to the Toronto retirement home last winter.
Age and illness often cause the body's sexual machinery to get a little rusty. After his prostate cancer, “it takes me all night to do what I used to do all night,” Mr. Hersch quips, with Borscht-Belt timing. But nothing diminishes the basic human desire for companionship, the yearning to love and be loved.
Given the cultural taboo regarding elderly sexuality, as well as the physical impairments that come with age, it's amazing that seniors have the bravery to put themselves out there and look for love. But they do.
One recent Saturday night, Mr. Hersch took Ms. Long Term to the movies, then to a burger joint for dinner. On Sunday, he rested because his angina was acting up. He knows it's bad, he says, when he gets breathless without even seeing a pretty woman. On Tuesday, he took his newest lady friend (as he calls them), a resident of the Terraces, for hot dogs at Costco. Other romances have blossomed over coffee, during a concert at the residence or on an outing to the mall.
The level of physical contact varies from couple to couple. Some express affection by holding hands, while others get hot and heavy.
“Completely depends on the person,” Mr. Hersch says. “One lady, on the second date she attacked me, and we went all the way!”
At the Terraces, 90 per cent of the residents are single. Women outnumber men 4 to 1, but a recent influx of single men such as Mr. Hersch has injected a jolt of excitement. Some men work the lunch room like Casanovas, throwing winks and smiles to women in all directions, and some women are happy to take the new men under their wings, shepherding them to activities and fussing over them the way they used to do with their husbands.
When Mr. Hersch arrived at the Terraces, his daughter announced to an elevator full of women that her father had just moved into apartment 310. They asked two questions: Does he have a car? (Yes.) And is he single? (Oh yeah, baby.)
“So,” Mr. Hersch says, “you can see how their minds work.”
Retirement homes have struggled to acknowledge senior sexuality. In the past, elderly people who were “caught” making out or even masturbating in their own beds were chided like naughty teenagers. That's changing, with more private rooms, better training for staff members and more open discussions of intimacy and sexuality.
“Attitudes are changing, slowly,” Baycrest social worker Ruth Goodman says. “The residents do have rights to have meaningful relationships with the people they choose. … People's need for emotional connection, social connection and intimacy is a lifelong need.”
If it's hard for workers to deal with romances among the residents, it can be even harder for sons and daughters to accept that their elderly parent has sexual needs. Some get angry at what they see as a betrayal of the deceased parent, or question their parent's judgment.
Mr. Hersch's daughter, Randi Kwinta, not only accepts her father's busy social calendar, she's constantly setting him up on blind dates. It's a little bizarre to be checking out 70-year-olds on behalf of her father, Ms. Kwinta acknowledges, but more than anything she wants him to be happy.
“He loves women and he loves to be in the company of women,” Ms. Kwinta says. “No one will ever replace my mom. But I want him to be in a relationship where there's mutual respect, where he can have fun and laugh. I would be very happy if he had a woman in his life he could take out to the movies and dinner, and maybe she would have him over once a week and cook him some chicken soup. I think he longs for that.”
Rebecca Hoch, 96, has lived at the Terraces for nine years, and although she's not interested in playing the dating game, she still keeps score. From her wheelchair, she notices which couples linger together after lunch and who's on the prowl. When an 80-year-old man says hello to her in the hallway, she nods back and whispers: “He likes the ladies.”
She says many women of the women here read Harlequin romances – “that's where they get their kicks” – but she prefers Jane Austen. (She's particularly partial to Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy in the BBC version of Pride and Prejudice.) She read one Danielle Steel novel to see what the fuss was about and was scandalized. “It wasn't even grammatically correct,” she says.
Mrs. Hoch sees how some women flirt. “They touch a man on the shoulder, on the arm. Maybe they want a man,” she says with some disapproval. But on second thought, she softens: “They're only in their 80s, they're young.”
Heather Lisner-Kerbel, a social worker at the Terraces, recalls one woman who fell in love with a man who had memory problems. Their relationship followed a frustrating pattern: They'd make plans, he would forget and stand her up, and her feelings would be hurt.
On top of the usual dating dilemmas – does he like me as much as I like him? – the elderly carry a lifetime of emotional baggage into each new relationship. Those widowed after a long and happy marriage often feel the most eager to start dating again, but new loves can discover it's difficult to compete with a memory.
Mr. Hersch keeps a full dance card, but his heart still belongs to his beloved Sylvia, his wife of 49 years. They met on a blind date when he was 17, and he loved her from the moment he saw her.
“Something clicked,” he says, a faraway look in his eyes. “I don't know what it was, but it lasted a long time.”
Mrs. Hersch died on July 4, 2002. Mr. Hersch still wakes up in the middle of the night and reaches for her.
While he longs for companionship, sometimes he feels like a magnet for the wrong kind of woman.
“That's my problem, I always find these women with problems,” he complains. And not stuff like being a close talker or having ugly feet – they've got issues such as Parkinson's, arthritis or senility. One girlfriend broke up with him because he didn't visit enough at the hospital after she broke a hip.
“It might sound hard, it might sound bad, but I've had my share of hospitals,” he says.
Mrs. Hersch struggled with chronic illness and spent the last seven months of her life in hospital. He stayed by her side through every needle stick and intubation, watching his first and only love fade away.
“You can only take so much,” he says.
So he plays the field. His newest companion is Sylvia Miller, an elegant 89-year-old who moved to the Terraces from Florida two years ago. One night, he didn't feel like eating dinner in his room alone, so he called her up and they went to Costco for hot dogs.
“Cheapest date I ever had – $4.18,” Mr. Hersch says.
“A real night out, whee!” Mrs. Miller says sardonically, raising her eyebrows and twirling a finger in the air.
Honestly though, she says, it was a treat. She loves to banter with Mr. Hersch even if she doesn't think there's much romantic possibility. She's been married three times, and people at the Terraces gossip that Mr. Hersch is next on the list. But she insists she's not looking for No. 4.
“It suits me absolutely perfectly,” she says. “No commitment and no obligations.”
Mr. Hersch finds irony in the fact that Mrs. Miller, 12 years his senior, is in better physical shape than any of his other girlfriends. She's good-looking and a sharp dresser – almost the perfect woman. But she has memory problems. When he asked for her phone number, she couldn't remember it.
“She's a nice lady … except for her mind,” Mr. Hersch says, adding with a shrug: “You can't have everything.”
Both say they're content to be just friends. But they also both seem to revel in the spark of flirtation that jumps between them.
At a piano concert and singalong at the Terraces one night, Mr. Hersch swivels in his chair to wave at Mrs. Miller two rows back during a heartfelt rendition of Besame Mucho. She smiles and waves, but he turns back around quickly.
“There's two women sitting between me and her and now they think I'm tied up to them,” he whispers, glancing nervously at the two rows of nearsighted women who are now smiling sweetly at him.
Such are the perils of being a retirement-home player. Still, Mr. Hersch says he'll never give up on his search for love. Who knows, if he meets the right woman he might even get married again. But she'd have to be pretty special.
“Most of the women just want to be taken out and shown a good time. A percentage of them want to get married, they don't care to who. They want to live in the style to which they've become accustomed,” he says, summarizing the 70-plus dating scene. “I'm not looking for a business arrangement. I want some emotions, I want some feelings. I want love.”
***
Sex and the single senior
And you thought the "sex talk" with your teenagers was awkward. Try discussing condoms and hookups with your elderly parents.
But as seniors live longer, healthier lives, they're more likely to stay sexually active.
This isn't just a Viagra-fuelled revolution. Though drugs do help with the mechanics, the real drive is deeper. "People's need for emotional connection, social connection and intimacy is a lifelong need," Baycrest social worker Ruth Goodman says.
So what do adult children need to know about their elderly parent's sex life - even if they're too afraid to ask?
Accept that they have one. A 2007 study of 3,005 adults published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that half of people aged 65 to 74 and a quarter of those 75 to 85 reported being sexually active (defined as "any mutually voluntary activity with another person that involves sexual contact, whether or not intercourse or orgasm occurs").
"A substantial number of men and women engage in vaginal intercourse, oral sex and masturbation even in the eighth and ninth decades of life," the study's authors concluded.
Intimacy doesn't just mean sex. Kissing, hugging, holding hands, dancing: All help people connect with their sensual selves, which can decrease loneliness and boost self-esteem.
If your parent is widowed, it can feel like a betrayal of the deceased spouse when they start dating. But people who had happy marriages are actually the most likely to pursue relationships.
Take your cue from them. If a relative wants to share with you, great. But they have a right to keep their sex life private. And if they want information, give it without judging. Your parents know their way around sex, but much has probably changed since they were last on the dating scene. While pregnancy isn't a concern, sexually transmitted diseases are.
Get over your hang-ups. Pop culture socializes us to think of old people having sex as icky or laughable. But remember, we'll all be old some day.
Rebecca Dube
To see original link and watch video, click on this link: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080520.wretirement3/BNStory/retirement/?pageRequested=all&print=true
-----------------------------
Looking for love, or.....
The equipment may be rusty, but you can still get lusty. And the desire for companionship never fades. Reporter Rebecca Dube and photographer Kevin Van Paassen watch sparks fly
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
May 28, 2008 at 12:00 AM EDT
Seymour Hersch has been dating the same woman for five years. He thinks she would love to get married; all he has to do is ask.
But marriage would only cramp his style – he would have to drop the other three women he's been seeing. He met some of his girlfriends through friends and family, others through an online dating service.
“They might be jealous, but I don't care,” he says. “I make it very clear I'm not interested in getting married.”
Just another commitment-shy bachelor – except Mr. Hersch is 77 and lives in a retirement home.
They may move more slowly than they did in their prime, but old people have still got moves. The number of Canadians 65 and older is set to double over the next three decades, and people are living longer and staying fit longer than ever before. They're still dating, hooking up and looking for love.
That's certainly true of Mr. Hersch, whose gap-toothed grin has become a flirtatious fixture at the Terraces of Baycrest since he moved to the Toronto retirement home last winter.
Age and illness often cause the body's sexual machinery to get a little rusty. After his prostate cancer, “it takes me all night to do what I used to do all night,” Mr. Hersch quips, with Borscht-Belt timing. But nothing diminishes the basic human desire for companionship, the yearning to love and be loved.
Given the cultural taboo regarding elderly sexuality, as well as the physical impairments that come with age, it's amazing that seniors have the bravery to put themselves out there and look for love. But they do.
One recent Saturday night, Mr. Hersch took Ms. Long Term to the movies, then to a burger joint for dinner. On Sunday, he rested because his angina was acting up. He knows it's bad, he says, when he gets breathless without even seeing a pretty woman. On Tuesday, he took his newest lady friend (as he calls them), a resident of the Terraces, for hot dogs at Costco. Other romances have blossomed over coffee, during a concert at the residence or on an outing to the mall.
The level of physical contact varies from couple to couple. Some express affection by holding hands, while others get hot and heavy.
“Completely depends on the person,” Mr. Hersch says. “One lady, on the second date she attacked me, and we went all the way!”
At the Terraces, 90 per cent of the residents are single. Women outnumber men 4 to 1, but a recent influx of single men such as Mr. Hersch has injected a jolt of excitement. Some men work the lunch room like Casanovas, throwing winks and smiles to women in all directions, and some women are happy to take the new men under their wings, shepherding them to activities and fussing over them the way they used to do with their husbands.
When Mr. Hersch arrived at the Terraces, his daughter announced to an elevator full of women that her father had just moved into apartment 310. They asked two questions: Does he have a car? (Yes.) And is he single? (Oh yeah, baby.)
“So,” Mr. Hersch says, “you can see how their minds work.”
Retirement homes have struggled to acknowledge senior sexuality. In the past, elderly people who were “caught” making out or even masturbating in their own beds were chided like naughty teenagers. That's changing, with more private rooms, better training for staff members and more open discussions of intimacy and sexuality.
“Attitudes are changing, slowly,” Baycrest social worker Ruth Goodman says. “The residents do have rights to have meaningful relationships with the people they choose. … People's need for emotional connection, social connection and intimacy is a lifelong need.”
If it's hard for workers to deal with romances among the residents, it can be even harder for sons and daughters to accept that their elderly parent has sexual needs. Some get angry at what they see as a betrayal of the deceased parent, or question their parent's judgment.
Mr. Hersch's daughter, Randi Kwinta, not only accepts her father's busy social calendar, she's constantly setting him up on blind dates. It's a little bizarre to be checking out 70-year-olds on behalf of her father, Ms. Kwinta acknowledges, but more than anything she wants him to be happy.
“He loves women and he loves to be in the company of women,” Ms. Kwinta says. “No one will ever replace my mom. But I want him to be in a relationship where there's mutual respect, where he can have fun and laugh. I would be very happy if he had a woman in his life he could take out to the movies and dinner, and maybe she would have him over once a week and cook him some chicken soup. I think he longs for that.”
Rebecca Hoch, 96, has lived at the Terraces for nine years, and although she's not interested in playing the dating game, she still keeps score. From her wheelchair, she notices which couples linger together after lunch and who's on the prowl. When an 80-year-old man says hello to her in the hallway, she nods back and whispers: “He likes the ladies.”
She says many women of the women here read Harlequin romances – “that's where they get their kicks” – but she prefers Jane Austen. (She's particularly partial to Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy in the BBC version of Pride and Prejudice.) She read one Danielle Steel novel to see what the fuss was about and was scandalized. “It wasn't even grammatically correct,” she says.
Mrs. Hoch sees how some women flirt. “They touch a man on the shoulder, on the arm. Maybe they want a man,” she says with some disapproval. But on second thought, she softens: “They're only in their 80s, they're young.”
Heather Lisner-Kerbel, a social worker at the Terraces, recalls one woman who fell in love with a man who had memory problems. Their relationship followed a frustrating pattern: They'd make plans, he would forget and stand her up, and her feelings would be hurt.
On top of the usual dating dilemmas – does he like me as much as I like him? – the elderly carry a lifetime of emotional baggage into each new relationship. Those widowed after a long and happy marriage often feel the most eager to start dating again, but new loves can discover it's difficult to compete with a memory.
Mr. Hersch keeps a full dance card, but his heart still belongs to his beloved Sylvia, his wife of 49 years. They met on a blind date when he was 17, and he loved her from the moment he saw her.
“Something clicked,” he says, a faraway look in his eyes. “I don't know what it was, but it lasted a long time.”
Mrs. Hersch died on July 4, 2002. Mr. Hersch still wakes up in the middle of the night and reaches for her.
While he longs for companionship, sometimes he feels like a magnet for the wrong kind of woman.
“That's my problem, I always find these women with problems,” he complains. And not stuff like being a close talker or having ugly feet – they've got issues such as Parkinson's, arthritis or senility. One girlfriend broke up with him because he didn't visit enough at the hospital after she broke a hip.
“It might sound hard, it might sound bad, but I've had my share of hospitals,” he says.
Mrs. Hersch struggled with chronic illness and spent the last seven months of her life in hospital. He stayed by her side through every needle stick and intubation, watching his first and only love fade away.
“You can only take so much,” he says.
So he plays the field. His newest companion is Sylvia Miller, an elegant 89-year-old who moved to the Terraces from Florida two years ago. One night, he didn't feel like eating dinner in his room alone, so he called her up and they went to Costco for hot dogs.
“Cheapest date I ever had – $4.18,” Mr. Hersch says.
“A real night out, whee!” Mrs. Miller says sardonically, raising her eyebrows and twirling a finger in the air.
Honestly though, she says, it was a treat. She loves to banter with Mr. Hersch even if she doesn't think there's much romantic possibility. She's been married three times, and people at the Terraces gossip that Mr. Hersch is next on the list. But she insists she's not looking for No. 4.
“It suits me absolutely perfectly,” she says. “No commitment and no obligations.”
Mr. Hersch finds irony in the fact that Mrs. Miller, 12 years his senior, is in better physical shape than any of his other girlfriends. She's good-looking and a sharp dresser – almost the perfect woman. But she has memory problems. When he asked for her phone number, she couldn't remember it.
“She's a nice lady … except for her mind,” Mr. Hersch says, adding with a shrug: “You can't have everything.”
Both say they're content to be just friends. But they also both seem to revel in the spark of flirtation that jumps between them.
At a piano concert and singalong at the Terraces one night, Mr. Hersch swivels in his chair to wave at Mrs. Miller two rows back during a heartfelt rendition of Besame Mucho. She smiles and waves, but he turns back around quickly.
“There's two women sitting between me and her and now they think I'm tied up to them,” he whispers, glancing nervously at the two rows of nearsighted women who are now smiling sweetly at him.
Such are the perils of being a retirement-home player. Still, Mr. Hersch says he'll never give up on his search for love. Who knows, if he meets the right woman he might even get married again. But she'd have to be pretty special.
“Most of the women just want to be taken out and shown a good time. A percentage of them want to get married, they don't care to who. They want to live in the style to which they've become accustomed,” he says, summarizing the 70-plus dating scene. “I'm not looking for a business arrangement. I want some emotions, I want some feelings. I want love.”
***
Sex and the single senior
And you thought the "sex talk" with your teenagers was awkward. Try discussing condoms and hookups with your elderly parents.
But as seniors live longer, healthier lives, they're more likely to stay sexually active.
This isn't just a Viagra-fuelled revolution. Though drugs do help with the mechanics, the real drive is deeper. "People's need for emotional connection, social connection and intimacy is a lifelong need," Baycrest social worker Ruth Goodman says.
So what do adult children need to know about their elderly parent's sex life - even if they're too afraid to ask?
Accept that they have one. A 2007 study of 3,005 adults published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that half of people aged 65 to 74 and a quarter of those 75 to 85 reported being sexually active (defined as "any mutually voluntary activity with another person that involves sexual contact, whether or not intercourse or orgasm occurs").
"A substantial number of men and women engage in vaginal intercourse, oral sex and masturbation even in the eighth and ninth decades of life," the study's authors concluded.
Intimacy doesn't just mean sex. Kissing, hugging, holding hands, dancing: All help people connect with their sensual selves, which can decrease loneliness and boost self-esteem.
If your parent is widowed, it can feel like a betrayal of the deceased spouse when they start dating. But people who had happy marriages are actually the most likely to pursue relationships.
Take your cue from them. If a relative wants to share with you, great. But they have a right to keep their sex life private. And if they want information, give it without judging. Your parents know their way around sex, but much has probably changed since they were last on the dating scene. While pregnancy isn't a concern, sexually transmitted diseases are.
Get over your hang-ups. Pop culture socializes us to think of old people having sex as icky or laughable. But remember, we'll all be old some day.
Rebecca Dube
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