It is good to be back to Maui because I love my Hawaiian coffee….The baby-boomer generation is now roughly 45-65 years of old. They face caring for elderly parents who are living ever longer. Statistics indicate that the boomers themselves will live much longer than the elderly generations that preceded them, creating insurance and other health issues.
In Maui it is a big issue because there are a lot of elderly there…Of course you have a lot of young people to which is why there is that there too. A lot of them eat junk food as well, I recommend more natural products such as Maui jelly and Hawaiian jams, jellies and butter as well as Hawaiian organic honey plus seasonings since they tend to be more natural overall. I think Hawaiian sea salt and made in Hawaii macadmai nuts plus Maui jellies are especially good overall.
The government has reported that there will be more than twenty million seniors over eighty-five years old by 2050. So, for example you can imagine the overall cost of elderly care here in SC where where we have a larger than average population and in particular the nusring homes alternatives where you need Alzheimers care and other specialty elderly care as well. Of course Maui and Hawaii health insurance costs take a bite as well and
some area Hawaii are right up there in those numbers on the whole in terms of insurance costs overall.
So to give you an idea of the size of this shift, there were three million seniors living in 2000. It is really interesting that in the early 1900′s, not quite five million Americans lived to the age of sixty-five.
In the generations before us, families took care of their aged members themselves. We have a different world, now, where 60% of women work. Increasingly, families look to outside assistance to shore the gap that our busier lives have created. Of course there are speciality medical costs involved such as injections, Shoulder Arthritis rehab and the like. Now, of course not every one is going to need prolotherapy and other specialized treatments but you get my general point that this stuff can get expensive over time. Let’s face it, it is different than getting a plastic surgeon.
It seems some of us don’t truly grow-up until we face these issues. We live in an isolating culture in the United States, where even family members who live together seem to lead quite separate lives.
When faced with an increasingly helpless and dependant parent, mortality and other issues are brought up front and personal. The children of elderly parents must come to grips with their own issues that the ultimate loss that time inevitably brings. In short—they must at least truly grow up.
