Overview
- Editors:
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Christine K. Cassel
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Department of Geriatrics, Mt. Sinai Medical Center, New York, USA
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John Richard Walsh
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Section of Geriatric Medicine, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Portland, USA
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Table of contents (33 chapters)
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Caring for the Geriatic Patient
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- Philip S. King, Robert Chen-Zong Yang
Pages 289-315
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Legal Issues in Geriatric Medicine
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Front Matter
Pages 345-345
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- Paul Nathanson, Robert Schwartz, Jack Hardwick, Laura Mason, Nancy Scanlan Neary
Pages 347-353
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- Robert Schwartz, Paul Nathanson, Jack Hardwick, Laura Mason, Nancy Scanlan Neary
Pages 354-368
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Health Care Systems and Geriatric Medicine
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Front Matter
Pages 369-369
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- Jeanie Schmit Kayser-Jones
Pages 397-412
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- DeWitt C. Baldwin Jr, Ruth Ann Williamson Tsukuda
Pages 421-435
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Research Issues in Geriatrics
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Front Matter
Pages 449-449
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- Michael McCally, Merwyn Greenlick, John C. Beck
Pages 451-463
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Back Matter
Pages 469-503
About this book
With the appearance of a textbook as comprehensive as this one, it is clear that the field of geriatrics is coming of age. The broad scope of these volumes shapes a substantial answer to the question, "What is geriatrics and why should we be interested in it?" As I see it, there are at least five reasons. First, the scientific or intellectual reason: gerontology is the study of aging from the biologic, psychological, and social perspectives. There is increasing interest in the fascinating insights into the biologic mechanisms of aging, errors in protein synthesis, DNA repair mechanisms, alterations of the neuroendocrine system, changes in the immune system, genetic controls, and somatic mutations. Second, the demographic reason: this is the century of old age. There has been a 26-year gain in the average life expectancy. This gain compares with that acquired from 3,000 years B.C. (the Bronze Age) to the year 1900, which was about 29 years. Therefore, in one century, there has been a gain in the average life expectancy almost equal to 5,000 previous years of human history. In 1830, one of three newborn infants survived beyond 60 years of age.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Geriatrics, Mt. Sinai Medical Center, New York, USA
Christine K. Cassel
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Section of Geriatric Medicine, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Portland, USA
John Richard Walsh