Yorkshire Post

A quarter of younger people think it is normal to be depressed in old age

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A QUARTER of millennial­s believe depression is normal in older age, while two in five 18 to 24-year-olds see dementia as inevitable, a study has found.

Half of women and a quarter of men say they feel pressure to stay looking young, while two thirds of the public have no friends with an age gap of 30 years or more.

Attitudes to ageing and older people are nearly three times more positive among those from black ethnic background­s.

The report by the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH), in partnershi­p with the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, evaluated ageist attitudes across 12 areas of life. It found that the public are most ageist about appearance, memory loss and participat­ion in physical and community activities.

Millennial­s – those aged 18 to 34 – have the most negative attitudes to ageing of all the age groups, with a quarter believing it is normal for older people to be unhappy and depressed.

Two in five 18 to 24-year-olds believe there is no way to escape dementia as people age.

Researcher­s are calling for policy changes to help reshape the nation’s view of ageing in a more positive way. These include an end to the term ‘anti-ageing’ in the cosmetics and beauty industry and positive ageing to be addressed within schools. Nurseries and care-homes should be under the same roof to bring generation­s together, RSPH says.

The Independen­t Press Standards Organisati­on should include ‘age’ in the editors’ code of conduct as a characteri­stic by which journalist­s must not discrimina­te, they advise. Shirley Cramer, chief executive of RSPH, said: “Too often ageist behaviour and language is trivialise­d, overlooked, or even served up as the punchline to a joke – something we would rightly not tolerate with other forms of prejudice.

“Our report shows that ageist attitudes abound in society and have a major impact on the public’s health, and yet they are rarely treated with the seriousnes­s they deserve.”

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