Report on healthy aging shines light on how Greenwich seniors are faring
GREENWICH — Alzheimer’s disease and related types of dementia are more common in the 65 and older population in Greenwich than in other municipalities, according to a recent report that shines a light on the senior community in the state.
While many chronic diseases, such as heart disease and cancer, have decreased in recent years, the incidence of Alzheimer’s has risen in town, said Lori Contadino, director of the Greenwich Commission on Aging, which oversees the Greenwich Senior Center.
Those are among the facts detailed in the 2021 Connecticut Healthy Aging Data Report, which was released in June. The firstof-its-kind report can assist state and local leaders in shaping policy, improving existing programs and creating new services to help Connecticut’s seniors age in a more healthy and graceful manner, researchers said.
The report includes community profiles for every city and town in Connecticut. Though most of the data was analyzed before COVID-19 struck in March 2020, the numbers reveal many fundamental needs of older adults that are becoming more critical as the pandemic drags on, researchers said.
“As the population ages, it’s something that we’ll all need to think about, because there are certainly opportunities that come with an aging population, but there are also challenges,” said Beth Dugan, an associate professor of gerontology at University of Massachusetts at Boston who led the research team that produced the data report.
The data in the new report aims to help municipal leaders support healthy aging in their communities, as the U.S. inches toward an unprecedented milestone in 2030. By then, all baby boomers will be 65 or older, and older adults will outnumber children for the first time in U.S. history.
In Greenwich, the population of more than 62,000 people includes more than 10,500 residents age 65 or older, or just under 20 percent of the residents. Nearly 25 percent of the town’s residents are 60 or older, according to the 2020 U.S. Census.
The older residents of Greenwich had lower rates of obesity, asthma, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, heart attacks, hypertension, liver disease, mental illness, and visual and mobility impairments, in comparison to the state average, according to the report.
However, they had higher rates of hip fractures, hearing impairments, prostate cancer, breast cancer, glaucoma, anemia and hypothyroidism, the report said.
For Contadino, the high rate of dementia has led the town to join Dementia Friends, a global movement to educate people about what it’s like to live with dementia and encourage them to turn that understanding into action. The longer a person lives, the higher their risk of developing Alzheimer’s or dementia, she said.
“But dementia is not a normal part of aging, and that’s the most important thing we reinforce in terms of our Dementia Friends program,” Contadino said.
Becoming age-friendly
The 85 and older population is the fastest-growing age group in Greenwich as well as in the rest of Fairfield County. It is a trend that spurred Contadino and other local leaders in 2016 to help Greenwich become an age-friendly community.
In Connecticut, agefriendly efforts exist in only four other municipalities: Glastonbury, Bethel, Newtown and Simsbury, according to the report.
“We’ve never lived in a time where most people can expect to get old … so having people in your community who are concerned about this is a strength,” Dugan said of municipal leaders in those five towns.
Community leaders are recognizing that their current infrastructure is not conducive to allowing their older adult constituents to age in place, Dugan said. But as the population continues rapidly aging, municipal leaders will soon be spurred into action, she said.
Hip fractures
The report also showed rates of hip fractures and glaucoma in Greenwich were among the highest in New England, which was surprising, Dugan added. But it could be a positive indication that seniors in town are screened and treated for those health issues, she said.
Greenwich, with Stamford, also ranked last in the number of seniors who had received a physical exam or checkup within the past year. (The data for Greenwich is combined with the data for Stamford, due to data sparsity, researchers said.)
Similarly, Greenwich and Stamford came in last for seniors who had dental insurance. But aging experts said the wealthier individuals in this cohort can pay for dental visits out-of-pocket, while for lower-income seniors, Medicare doesn’t provide any dental insurance.
Greenwich ranked 25th out of all 169 municipalities in Connecticut for the number of people age 65 and older who were Medicare beneficiaries and had a hip fracture, a serious injury that is often the result of a fall.
Up to 50 percent of patients with hip fractures die within six months, some reports show, and many others do not recover their former level of independence and function, according to the National Library of Medicine.
“The biggest risk factor is, individuals with hip fractures tend to go into rehabilitation facilities, skilled nursing facilities, where infection rates are higher than in the community where they would be living alone,” said Marie Allen, executive director of the Southwestern Connecticut Agency on Aging.
“Individuals almost always have to go into a rehabilitation facility for a period of rehab or physical therapy after that,” she said. “Very few people are able to leave the hospital and go home.”
Deafness and hearing impairments
Greenwich has the largest population in the state of seniors age 65 and older who have a clinical diagnosis of deafness or hearing impairment, at 22 percent, according to the report.
Alan Gunzburg, former chairman of the Greenwich Board of Human Services, who has visual and hearing impairments, said his hearing aids cost $7,500, which many cannot afford.
Lower-income individuals might forgo audiology appointments and the hearing aids they might need as a result of their diagnosis, he said.
But in a wealthy town such as Greenwich, the rate of hearing impairments could be higher, because more individuals can afford doctor visits, and the diagnosis of needing a hearing impairment, Gunzburg said.
“As somebody who has lost his vision and lost his hearing, the hearing part is worse,” the 61-year-old said. “When you can’t hear, then you’re in the room with people, but you’re so far separated.”
Chronic illnesses
In all but two Connecticut communities — Bethlehem and Morris — at least 50 percent of seniors age 65 and older had four or more chronic illnesses, according to the report.
In Greenwich, that number is 57 percent of seniors, who cited Alzheimer’s or related dementia, cancer, anemia and autism as among their chronic ailments. Only 9 percent of people age 65 and older in Greenwich had no chronic health conditions, according to the report.
“What we non-seniors need to be aware of is our lifestyle now, how we live our lives, our nutrition, our fitness, our everything,” said Donna Spellman, executive director of River House, the only adult day care center in Greenwich.
“As somebody who is surrounded by seniors all day, every day, and seeing all the ailments they come in with — and I don’t mean the dementia-related diagnoses, but I mean, high blood pressure and diabetes and cholesterol issues and arthritis, others things that are chronic and troublesome. So many of those things could possibly if they weren’t genetic have been avoided,” Spellman said.
With 10,000 baby boomers turning 65 every day, she said younger individuals should focus on healthy living to avoid chronic conditions later in life and community leaders should support those who live a long list of chronic health conditions. The need easy access to transportation, doctors, supermarkets and other settings where they can meet their most basic needs, Spellman said.