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Decision making by the growing elderly
population is uncharted territory
Medicare, driving, retirement and medical
treatments can be a pain on the brain
The human brain’s ability to process
information declines with age, but knowledge
about the world through experiences tends to
rise over time. So how do these shifts
affect a person’s ability to make sound
decisions?
It turns out that it depends on the
situation. In some decisions, thinking
harder about unfamiliar information will
produce the best decisions, and older adults
are likely to fare less well, says Ellen
Peters, courtesy professor of psychology at
the University of Oregon and senior research
scientist with Decision Research. But in
other situations, she said, people make
better choices when they rely on emotions
and past experiences, and older adults may
excel in this condition.
More research is needed to understand how
decisions differ across the lifespan so that
better advice can be tailored to older
adults, Peters said. "We know quite a bit
about how the brain processes information,
but we don’t know a whole lot about how that
is going to interact in decisions with
experiences and emotional prompts," she
said.
Peters is co-author of a paper in which she
and colleagues examine existing literature
about the aging brain and decision making.
Little is known about this important topic
at a time when Americans are looking at a
fast-growing elderly population, she and
colleagues write in the quarterly journal
Perspectives on Psychological Science
(Volume 2, Issue 1).
By 2050, they note, there will be more
people older than 65 than those younger than
15 for the first time in history.
"Having a high quality of life requires good
decisions, yet we know next to nothing about
age differences in decision making," Peters
said.
"For many elderly individuals, the
ability to function independently is a
particular concern. By understanding when
the elderly make decisions as well as or
better than young adults and when their
decisions are compromised by declining
cognitive abilities, policymakers, family
and friends can better target situations in
which assistance is more necessary and other
situations where it is not needed."
The review article looked at basic
information processes and mechanisms that
have been studied around the world, using a
dual-process approach. One process involves
how people think their way through
information; the other focuses on how they
feel their way through it.
"There were robust differences in these
systems," Peters said. "Thinking capacity
declines with time. We learn less easily. We
process information more slowly." However,
from the emotional side of processing, "We
may show improvements over time. We may tend
to feel our way through decisions more when
we are older."
While that improvement may exist, older
people who respond emotionally may be more
prone to becoming victims of scam artists,
who often play on emotion, Peters said.
An emerging idea, she added, is that an
older person’s motivation may change from
the forward-looking vision of a young person
to one that prioritizes feeling good in the
moment. She noted a just-published study in
the journal Psychology and Aging by Corinna
E. Löckenhoff and Laura L. Carstensen of
Stanford University that found that older
people focus more on positive benefits than
on negative risks in making health choices.
Understanding the effects of these processes
is vital to improving aging people’s
decision-making, Peters said. "Older people
who make mistakes have less time and less
physical resiliency to compensate for bad
decisions than do younger people," she said.
"Older people are more vulnerable. We may
not be able to teach an old dog new tricks,
but the old dog may have lots and lots of
old tricks that help quite a bit. In some
situations, the old dogs may be making
better decisions than the pups."
Peters began looking at this topic while
studying how the presentation of information
impacts medical decisions by older people,
particularly issues involving Medicare and
prescription drug options. In one study,
participants were asked to pick the lowest
co-payment among four insurance policies. A
simple chart showed the plans, monthly
premiums and co-payments, but more than 40
percent of 80-84 year olds failed to choose
$5 from options ranging from $5 to $15.
With aging people being faced with major
decisions affecting their ability to live
independently, including finances and
retirement, medical treatments, when to quit
driving and what food to eat, understanding
age differences in how information is
processed in decisions has important
theoretical and pragmatic implications,
Peters said. "Dealing with numbers, for
example, is an area in which older adults
require more assistance," she said.
In a separate study, published in the April
issue of the journal Medical Care Research
and Review, Peters and another group of
scientists concluded that "less is more" in
the presentation of numbers portraying
medical information. In three studies, 303
employment-aged adults from 18 to 64 years
old weighed various amounts and formats of
information about hospital treatments.
Simple presentations dramatically helped
people with lower number-processing skills
understand more and make higher quality
decisions. Researchers also found that the
use of symbols sometimes helped people make
decisions and other times hindered them.
###
Co-authors with Peters on the study in
Perspectives in Psychological Science were
Thomas M. Hess of North Carolina State
University, Daniel Västfjäll of Decision
Research and Goteborg University in Sweden
and Corinne Auman of Presbyterian College in
South Carolina. The report was supported by
the National Science Foundation, the
National Institutes of Health and the NIH
National Institute on Aging.
Co-authors with Peters on the study
appearing in Medical Care Research and
Review were: Nathan Dieckmann, a graduate
teaching fellow at the University of Oregon
and researcher at Decision Research; Anna
Dixon, lecturer in European Health Policy at
the London School of Economics and former
visiting scholar in the UO Institute for
Policy Research and Innovation; Judith H.
Hibbard, professor of planning, public
policy & management at the UO; and C.K.
Mertz of Decision Research. The study was
funded by the Blue Cross Blue Shield
Association and the National Science
Foundation.
Decision Research is a non-profit research
institute founded in 1976 in Eugene to help
individuals, industry, government and
society understand and cope with the complex
and often risky decisions of modern life.
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