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2 September 2003 | Volume 139 Issue 5 Part 2 | Pages 395-399
Social capital is defined as the resources available to individuals and groups through social connections and social relations with others. Access to social capital enables older citizens to maintain productive, independent, and fulfilling lives. As the U.S. population ages, accompanied by a rise in the prevalence of seniors living alone, the availability of social capital within communities will become an important ingredient of successful aging. Recent evidence suggests that many traditional forms of social capital in communitiesas represented by civic engagement in local associations and by the extent of voluntarism and social trustare on the decline. If this observation in correct, there is no simple solution to rebuilding this lost social capital. Novel forms of senior housing, such as planned care developments and assisted-living facilities, may offer promising modes of delivery of social capital to the aging population. However, assisted living remains financially inaccessible for a large segment of the U.S. population, so investment in communities "aging in place" may be the key to delivering the health dividends of social capital.
Author and Article Information
From Merck Research Laboratories, Blue Bell, Pennsylvania; Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana; and Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest: None disclosed.
Requests for Single Reprints: Ichiro Kawachi, MD, PhD, Harvard School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115.
Current Author Addresses: Dr. Cannuscio: Epidemiology Department, Merck Research Laboratories, 10 Sentry Parkway BL 1-7, Blue Bell, PA 19422.
Dr. Block: 727 1/2 Henry Clay, New Orleans, LA 70118.
Dr. Kawachi: Department of Health and Social Behavior, Harvard School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115. DETERMINANTS OF SUCCESSFUL AGING: DEVELOPING AN INTEGRATED RESEARCH AGENDA FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
Christopher M. Callahan, MD; Colleen A. McHorney, PhD; and Cynthia D. Mulrow, MD, MSc, Editors
Social Capital and Successful Aging: The Role of Senior Housing
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