ABSTRACT

This book examines the relevance of modern medicine and healthcare in shaping the lives of elderly persons and the practices and institutions of ageing societies. Combining individual and social dimensions, Planning Later Life discusses the ethical, social, and political consequences of increasing life expectancies and demographic change in the context of biomedicine and public health.

By focusing on the field of biomedicine and healthcare, the authors engage readers in a dialogue on the ethical and social implications of recent trends in dementia research and care, advance healthcare planning, or the rise of anti-ageing medicine and prevention. Bringing together the largely separated debates of individualist bioethics on the one hand, and public health ethics on the other, the volume deliberately considers the entanglements of envisioning, evaluating, and controlling individual and societal futures. So far, the process of devising and exploring the various positive and negative visions and strategies related to later life has rarely been reflected systematically from a philosophical, sociological, and ethical point of view.

As such, this book will be crucial to those working and studying in the life sciences, the humanities, and the social sciences, particularly in the areas of bioethics, social work, gerontology and aging studies, healthcare and social service, sociology, social policy, and geography and population studies.

part 2|74 pages

Perspectives and problems of old age in the context of medicine and healthcare

chapter 6|15 pages

Competence and cognitive deterioration

Are we paying enough attention to ethical issues?

chapter 8|12 pages

Not growing old – gracefully

chapter 9|16 pages

How to think about age-group justice

The capabilities approach

part 3|107 pages

Individual provisions and public policies in ageing societies

chapter 10|15 pages

Final decisions for the final crisis

Hopes and hypes regarding the advance directive in Germany

chapter 11|17 pages

Preparing existential decisions in later life

Advance healthcare planning

chapter 13|14 pages

Paradoxes of planning later life

Anti-ageing practices and the lived body

chapter 14|23 pages

The visionary shaping of dementia research

Imaginations and scenarios in biopolitical narratives and ethical reflections

chapter 16|14 pages

Legacies, generations, and ageing futures

The ethics of intergenerativity