
The report notes that our aging demographic is the most educated in history and that education seems to correlate with healthy aging:
'"Education is a particularly powerful factor in both life expectancy and health, and we're not quite sure why," Richard Suzman, associate director for behavioral and social research at the National Institute on Aging, said in the teleconference. Better-educated people may have more money to pay for health care, and they may know more about a healthy lifestyle, he said.
By 2030, more than one-fourth of the older generation is likely to have an undergraduate degree, the report said."

So when I moved to Los Angeles and adopted America as my new home, it always struck me as odd that people could, in fact, be uninsured and uncovered financially in case of a medical catastophe. It struck against my innate sense of social responsibility that parents sent their children to private school and didn't support a public school system and that they and their children would amass tens of thousands of dollars of debt in order to head to college or university.
There have also been studies on aging and memory (UCLA comes to mind) that have seen a correlation between lifelong learning, acquiring knowledge of new processes and disciplines throughout the aging process and the impact on healthy aging. My grandmother instinctively knew that it was important to do a challenge crossword every day to keep her mind active and she constantly explored new methods of painting or learned a new musical instrument (she was a terrible musician...but that didn't stop her from practicing on an ocharina).


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