At Manchester Metropolitan University, experts in muscle and bone are working to change minds. Because, with a vast body of pioneering work on the biomechanics and physiology of older people, our researchers are working to defy a stereotype of ageing shaped and reinforced by everything from soap operas to healthcare policy.
How we think about age
With every stage of the human life course, from infancy and adolescence, into maturity, middle age and old age, there are certain expectations to live up to. Children learn, teenagers go through the rollercoaster of puberty, adults settle down to start a family. Finally, the stereotype dictates that it’s time to slow up, sit down and give way to infirmity.
Of course, age does take its toll. Bones and muscles weaken, balance fades and the body’s ability to heal recedes. The risk of falls and fractures grows. People lose what the World Health Organization refers to as their ‘intrinsic capacity’.
What is changing is when and how this happens, because people are living much longer. According to the Office for National Statistics, life expectancy for women has increased from around 65 years in 1931 to almost 83 years in 2011. Traditional ideas of old age are getting tired.
The enduring image – sitting immobile at home – is an invitation to settle into a sedentary lifestyle. Expecting frailty to come can, in fact, hasten its arrival. So, across hundreds of research papers and projects, a group of experts at Manchester Met are challenging that stereotype, charting a healthier way of ageing and, in the process, making an impact on millions of people’s lives.