Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Expecting a NEW NORMAL

- By Bruce Horovitz

Imagine this scenario, perhaps a year or two in the future: An effective COVID-19 vaccine is routinely available, and the world is moving forward. Life, however, will likely never be the same — particular­ly for people over 60.

That is the conclusion of geriatric medical doctors, aging experts, futurists and industry specialist­s. Experts say that in the aftermath of the pandemic, everything will change, from the way older folks receive health care to how they travel and shop. Also overturned: their work life and relationsh­ips with one another.

“In the past few months, the entire world has had a near-death experience,” said Ken Dychtwald, CEO of Age Wave, a think tank on aging around the world. “We’ve been forced to stop and think: I could die or someone I love could die. When those events happen, people think about what matters and what they will do differentl­y.”

Older adults are uniquely vulnerable because their immune systems tend to deteriorat­e with age, making it so much harder for them to battle not just COVID-19 but all infectious diseases.

They are also more likely to suffer other health conditions, like heart and respirator­y diseases, that make it tougher to fight or recover from illness. So it’s no surprise that even in the future, when a COVID-19 vaccine is widely available, and widely used, most seniors will be taking additional precaution­s.

“Before COVID-19, baby boomers, those born after 1945 but before 1965, felt reassured that with all the

benefits of modern medicine, they could live for years and years,” said Dr. Mehrdad Ayati, who teaches geriatric medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine and advises the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging. “What we never calculated was that a pandemic could totally change the dialogue.”

It has. Here’s a preview of post-vaccine life for older Americans:

Time to learn telemed. Only 62% of people over 75 use the internet, and fewer than 28% are comfortabl­e with social media, according to data from the Pew Research Center.

“That’s lethal in the modern age of health care,” Dychtwald said, so there will be a drumbeat to make them fluent users of online health care: 1 in 3 visits will be telemed.

Dr. Ronan Factora, a geriatrici­an at Cleveland Clinic, said he saw no patients age 60 and up via telemedici­ne before the pandemic. He predicted that by the time a COVID-19 vaccine is available, at least a third of those visits will be virtual.

“It will become a significan­t part of my practice,” he said.

Older patients likely will see their doctors more often than once a year for a checkup and benefit from improved overall health care, he said.

More regular remote care will be bolstered by a team of doctors, said Greg Poland, professor of medicine and infectious diseases at

the Mayo Clinic. The team model “allows me to see more patients more efficientl­y,” he said. “If everyone has to come to the office and wait for the nurse to bring them in from the waiting room, well, that’s an inherent drag on my productivi­ty.”

Drugstores will do more vaccinatio­ns. To avoid the germs in doctors’ offices, older patients will prefer to go to drugstores for regular vaccinatio­ns such as flu shots, Factora said. Your plumbing will be your doctor. In the not-too-distant future, perhaps just a few years from now, older Americans will have special devices at home to regularly analyze urine and fecal samples, Dychtwald said, letting them avoid the doctor’s office.

Travel

Punch up the Google Maps. Many trips of 800 miles or less will likely become road trips instead of flights, said Ed Perkins, a syndicated travel columnist for the Chicago Tribune. Perkins, who is 90, said that’s certainly what he plans to do, even after there’s a vaccine. Regional and local travel will replace foreign travel. Dychtwald, who is 70, said he will be much less inclined to

travel abroad.

For example, he said, onetime plans with his wife to visit India are now unlikely, even if a good vaccine is available, because they want to avoid large concentrat­ions of people. That said, each year only 25% of people 65 and up travel outside the U.S. annually, vs. 45% of the general population, according to a survey by Visa. The most popular trip for seniors: visiting grandchild­ren.

Demand for business class will grow. When older travelers (who are financiall­y able) choose to f ly, they will more frequently book roomy business-class seats because they won’t want to sit too close to other passengers, Factora said.

Buying three seats for two. Older couples who fly together — and have the money — will pay for all three seats so no one is between them, Perkins said.

Hotels will market medical care. Medical capability will be built into more travel options, Dychtwald said. For example, some hotels will advertise a doctor on-site, or one close by.

“The era is over of being removed from health care and feeling comfortabl­e,” he said.

Disinfecti­ng will be a sales pitch. Expect a rich combinatio­n of health and safety “theater” — particular­ly on cruises that host many older travelers, Perkins said: “Employees will be wandering around with disinfecti­ng fogs and wiping everything 10 times.”

Cruises will require proof of vaccinatio­n. Passengers — as well as cruise employees — will likely have to prove they’ve been vaccinated before traveling, Factora said.

Eating/shopping

Local restaurant­s will gain trust. Neighborho­od and small-market restaurant­s will draw loyal customers, mainly because they know and trust the owners, said Christophe­r

Muller, a hospitalit­y professor at Boston University. Safety will be a bragging point.

To appeal to older diners in particular, restaurant­s will prominentl­y display safety-inspection signage and visibly signal their cleanlines­s standards, Muller said. They will even hire employees exclusivel­y to wipe down tables, chairs and all hightouch points, and these employees will be easy to identify and very visible.

Home life

The homecoming. Because of so many COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes, more seniors will leave assisted living facilities and nursing homes to move in with their families, Factora said.

“Families will generally move closer together,” he said.

The fortress. Home delivery of almost everything will become the norm for

older Americans, and inperson shopping will become much less common, Factora said.

Older workers will stay home. The 60-and-up workforce increasing­ly will be reluctant to work anywhere

but from home and will be very slow to re-embrace grocery shopping.

“Instacart delivery will become the new normal for them,” Dychtwald said.

Gatherings

Forced social distancing. Whenever or wherever large families gather, people exhibiting COVID-like symptoms may not be welcomed under any circumstan­ces, Ayati said.

Older folks will disengage, at a cost. Depression will skyrocket among older people who isolate from family get-togethers and large gatherings, Ayati said.

“As the older population pulls back from engaging in society, this is a very bad thing,” Avati said.

Public restrooms will be revamped. For germ avoidance, they’ll increasing­ly get no-touch toilets, urinals, sinks and entrances/exits.

“One of the most disastrous places you can go into is a public restroom,” Poland said. “That’s about the riskiest place.”

 ?? LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Six Mile Road in the heart of Gold Country provides a scenic drive through a canopy of trees in the town of Murphys, Calif. Even when a COVID-19 vaccine is available and in wide use, many seniors will be looking at car trips as opposed to flying.
LOS ANGELES TIMES Six Mile Road in the heart of Gold Country provides a scenic drive through a canopy of trees in the town of Murphys, Calif. Even when a COVID-19 vaccine is available and in wide use, many seniors will be looking at car trips as opposed to flying.
 ?? COURTESY OF PETRA SHAW ?? Telemedici­ne allows doctors to remain in contact with patients and treat concerns that don’t require an in-person visit.
COURTESY OF PETRA SHAW Telemedici­ne allows doctors to remain in contact with patients and treat concerns that don’t require an in-person visit.
 ??  ?? A patients blood samples are seen during a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n study at Research Centers of America in Hollywood, Fla.
A patients blood samples are seen during a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n study at Research Centers of America in Hollywood, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States