Mini Review Volume 4 Issue 4
Geriatrics Service, University of São Paulo School of Medicine Hospital das Clínicas, Brazil
Correspondence: Milton Roberto Furst Crenitte, Geriatrics Service, University of São Paulo School of Medicine Hospital das Clínicas - São Paulo (SP), Brazil
Received: July 27, 2019 | Published: August 19, 2019
Citation: Crenitte MRF. Challenges for the successful aging of LGBT older adults. MOJ Gerontol Ger. 2019;4(4):148-149. DOI: 10.15406/mojgg.2019.04.00197
The aging of older lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people (LGBT) may have some particularities and challenges. They can suffer from the ageism of society, and from the consequences of loneliness, for example.1
Besides that, some researches of the aging field have already suggested that “heterosexual aging” study models and data would be insufficient to understand the complexities and particularities of old-age experiences of people who express non-hegemonic forms of sexuality.1
Few studies have addressed this issue, especially in the Brazilian medical literature. In addition, the geriatrician and gerontologist may encounter challenging situations in their practices when assisting an older LGBT person with dementia or even at their end of life.2
The aim of this article was not only to uncover the loneliness and invisibility of LGBT older people. But also, to reveal the experiences of the Brazilian Non-Governmental Organization “Eternamente SOU” and how such activities can help to promote active and successful aging.
Since the 1940s, researchers have been searching for the best definition for the concept of successful aging.3 In 2008, Young and colleagues4 expounded the state in which the person can recruit psychosocial and social adaptive resources to compensate physiological limitations and ensure a sense of well-being and quality of life, even in a disease context and inability.
In this sense, Fredriksen-Goldsen and colleagues5 studied the aging of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT), and developed a resiliency model to explain the conditions attached to its successful aging.
In this model, internalized homophobia,6 which is the negative feeling LGBT may have about itself, lack of access to health services, obesity and functional limitation represent the risk factors. Then, social support and the size of its network represent the protective factors.5 Thus, discussion also began on the importance of subjective activities and experience as necessary and independent components in these aspects.
Therefore, the objectives of this article were: problematizing the loneliness and invisibility of LGBT older people, the account of the experiences of the Non-Governmental Organization Eternamente SOU and how such activities can help to promote active and successful aging.
Older LGBT people are at greater risk of having no children, living alone, being unmarried, having no family to call in an emergency, having experienced any prior violence and having used or abused alcohol and drugs.7–9
Other issues related to aging are also determining factors for the individual to feel alone, such as retirement, the death of a loved one and changes in housing, income and health.7–9 In addition to the direct potential impact on health, with the increased risk of cardiovascular disease and poor control of depression and anxiety, the loneliness and social isolation these people suffer may also have negative repercussions on the follow-up of patients with dementia,10and even in Palliative Care.11
Who knows the story of Grace and Frankie, Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin characters in the Netflix series, also know the drama of their husbands, Robert and Sol, which decides to divorce their wives to marry each other.
In a classic example of “life imitating art,” understanding why it took them so long to “get out of the closet” can help to understand the current generation of LGBT seniors.
If Robert and Sol were 80 years old today, in 1973 they were 44, when the American Psychiatric Association ceased to consider homosexuality as a disease. In addition, at age 50 they began to hear about AIDS and at age 60 some of their close friends began to die from the disease.
For these two, and for many of their LGBT contemporaries, invisibility was a found way to escape discrimination, and in some cases to survive. However, remaining invisible at this age can have detrimental consequences on all health-related bio-psycho-social dimensions.2 For one side, this invisibility, as already mentioned, can increase your sense of loneliness.
On the other hand, people who “come out of the closet” and talk to their doctors about their sexual orientation and gender identity expose higher levels of satisfaction. They even have better access to health services, better control of their chronic diseases and greater adherence to health promotion guidelines.12 Data from Canada show that lesbian older women express higher risks than heterosexual women from not having mammograms or pap smears, and a high chance of not having a trusted doctor.13,14 Even depression and suicide are more common in this group, expressing more impactful rates among trans aged people.15
In addition, research involving this portion of the population shows that they suffer a "double invisibility". They experience stigma because they are older in a society that values mainly youth-related aspects and also because they are LGBT, as the community judges their sexuality as deviant.2
Who knows the story of Grace and Frankie, Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin characters in the Netflix series, also know the drama of their husbands, Robert and Sol, which decides to divorce their wives to marry each other.
In a classic example of “life imitating art,” understanding why it took them so long to “get out of the closet” can help to understand the current generation of LGBT seniors.
If Robert and Sol were 80 years old today, in 1973 they were 44, when the American Psychiatric Association ceased to consider homosexuality as a disease. In addition, at age 50 they began to hear about AIDS and at age 60 some of their close friends began to die from the disease.
For these two, and for many of their LGBT contemporaries, invisibility was a found way to escape discrimination, and in some cases to survive. However, remaining invisible at this age can have detrimental consequences on all health-related bio-psycho-social dimensions.2 For one side, this invisibility, as already mentioned, can increase your sense of loneliness.
On the other hand, people who “come out of the closet” and talk to their doctors about their sexual orientation and gender identity expose higher levels of satisfaction. They even have better access to health services, better control of their chronic diseases and greater adherence to health promotion guidelines.12 Data from Canada show that lesbian older women express higher risks than heterosexual women from not having mammograms or pap smears, and a high chance of not having a trusted doctor.13,14 Even depression and suicide are more common in this group, expressing more impactful rates among trans aged people.15
In addition, research involving this portion of the population shows that they suffer a "double invisibility". They experience stigma because they are older in a society that values mainly youth-related aspects and also because they are LGBT, as the community judges their sexuality as deviant.2
Considerable progress has been made towards public policies aimed at LGBT segmentation in Brazil in recent years, but much remains to be done.2
The LGBTfobia is a reality that needs to be considered and confronted by laws that quantify, qualify and monitor the violence for reasons of hatred and intolerance in order to ensure proper treatment for these situations, as well as the visibility of the cause and the society's awareness of its confrontation.
Thus, in 2017 the collective Eternamente SOU, who subsequently was formed as a non-governmental organization (NGO), in order to give visibility to issues that guide this segment, with a focus on performance directly with LGBT seniors, in the participation of the militancy to implement specific public policies for this population and also in the qualification and training of professionals working in the social and health care network, thus favouring a gerontological culture more sensitive to the specificities of this population, uniting knowledge and experiences.
This NGO also conducts events and socio-educational activities to promote self-awareness, autonomy, independence and empowerment of LGBT older people through artistic languages such as Body Expression, Theater, monthly themed meetings, among others.
These activities favour the strengthening of affective bonds and of belonging, relevant to the strengthening of social support network and to face the loneliness and the isolation.16–18
I would like to thank Dr Wilson Jacob Filho, chief of geriatrics service at the Clinics Hospital of the Medicine School of University of Sao Paulo, for his support.
The author declare no conflict of interest.
The author declares that the article was written with personal resources.
©2019 Crenitte. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.