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‘Elderly’ or ‘older’? Advocates and a dictionary address language on aging.

Experts in the field of aging get frustrated with terms like “senior” and “elderly” that describe people just as likely to be in a wheelchair as climbing a mountain.

Now, they have one of the world’s major dictionaries ready to change one important age-related reference.

Why We Wrote This

Words matter. As lifespans have expanded, so have the ways people can describe older people, moving beyond age and physical condition.

That lexical undercurrent was at play this week as more than 4,000 researchers, scientists, and others gathered at the annual Gerontological Society of America (GSA) conference to talk about themes of loneliness, dementia, Medicare, and … Donald Trump (as in, what last week’s presidential victory bodes for all these issues).

Sessions included a study on stigma-inducing ageist terms used on social media, a ChatGPT analysis of election news coverage, and a look at words used in children’s media portrayals of older characters.

What capped it off was last month’s GSA-led effort asking the world’s most influential dictionaries to make changes.

Patricia D’Antonio, executive director of the GSA’s National Center to Reframe Aging, wrote letters asking the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) and Merriam Webster to change its definition of “ageism” by dropping the loaded word “elderly” and using, instead, “older people” – a more inclusive definition.

The OED responded in a week, agreeing.

Experts in the field of aging get frustrated with terms like “senior” and “elderly” commonly used to describe a diverse cast of characters as likely to be in a wheelchair as climbing a mountain.

Now, they have one of the world’s major dictionaries ready to change one important age-related reference.

That lexical undercurrent was at play this week as more than 4,000 researchers, social scientists, and others concerned with the issues of aging gathered here to talk about themes of loneliness, dementia, Medicare, and … Donald Trump (as in, what last week’s presidential victory bodes for all these issues).

Why We Wrote This

Words matter. As lifespans have expanded, so have the ways people can describe older people, moving beyond age and physical condition.

Threading throughout the annual scientific conference of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA) is attention to the impact of more prosaic use of words. Sessions examined the effects of terminology, including a study scouring 62 million posts on the social media platform X for stigma-inducing ageist terms; a ChatGPT analysis of ageist words in 2024 presidential election news coverage; and a look at words used in children’s books and media portrayals of older characters (finding they’re either loving or “no fun” and “crabby,” nothing in between).

But what capped it all off was the GSA-led effort last month asking the world’s most influential dictionaries to make changes.

“We’re trying to change culture,” explains Patricia D’Antonio, executive director of the GSA’s National Center to Reframe Aging. “How we communicate about aging,” she says, can drive stereotypical perceptions of older people, from “Everybody’s in a nursing home” to “Everybody’s retired and on a cruise” – while missing the reality of diversity in between.

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