May 16, 2018

Do people really die of old age?

 

What we usually mean when we say that someone has ‘died of old age’ is that they have died as the result of a combination of factors that might not be immediately obvious.

As we age, the chance that we will suffer from a range of medical conditions increases. Our immune system becomes weaker, and our cells don’t work so well.

Because cells are weaker, they are less able to cope with disorders or disease.

Conditions such as heart disease, cancer, or a neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s disease or dementia, become harder for our bodies to fight as our cells age.

Disease affects how well our body can function, and this weakness can lead to loss of mobility, or trouble swallowing, greater risk of falls, or increased likelihood of infection.

These complications from conditions that accumulate in old age are often what actually causes a person to die.

For example, a person with dementia may have trouble swallowing. They might inhale a small particle of food, get pneumonia, and that pneumonia will be their eventual cause of death.

So, people do not die just from old age.

What is written on the death certificate?

In the past, doctors would often write on the death certificate that a person had died of ‘natural causes’ or ‘old age’.

But these days a more specific cause of death is required on death certificates.

For example, a person who died of a heart attack may have the cause of death listed at ‘cardiac arrest’, and the underlying cause listed as ‘heart disease’. In the past, this may have simply been recorded as ‘old age’.

But sometimes it’s not easy to identify exactly what the case of death was, particularly if the person is very elderly or suffering from a number of conditions.

In these cases, terms such as ‘multiple organ failure’ or ‘debility’ are sometimes listed as cause of death.

For very old people, doctors might be less likely to conduct thorough investigations to determine the exact cause of death, as they would for a young person.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

We thank every selfless aged care worker on International Women’s Day

On International Women’s Day 2022, we share the stories of three selfless aged care workers, who have spoken candidly about what it has been like working in aged care on the frontline over the past 12 months – and thank them for their tireless work. All three are at the limits of their emotional and physical reserves and are pleading with management and the government for more staff – and for their work to be recognised, respected and appreciated. Read More

“The gift that keeps on taking” Michael J. Fox’s honest opinion about his fate, research breakthrough

Actor Michael J. Fox has shown brutal honesty about his mortality and his thirty-year-long battle with Parkinson’s disease just after his foundation published a key breakthrough to help diagnose and treat the neurodegenerative disease. Read More

“Determined” 98 year old becomes Victoria’s oldest COVID-19 survivor

Marianne Schwartz, who is 98 and survived the holocaust, has become the oldest Victorian to have beaten the deadly COVID-19 virus. Infected with COVID-19 in July, she was in Cabrini Hospital for over a month before being released earlier this week, in time to celebrate her 98th birthday three days later. She was on and... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version