Harry R. Moody
Hunter College
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Ageing & Society | 1995
Harry R. Moody
Different scenarios for an ageing society presume different approaches to the meaning of old age. One scenario anticipates a Prolongation of Morbidity , where quality of life concerns might permit active euthanasia or suicide as a means of saving money. Those who believe in a Compression of Morbidity opt for health promotion to delay morbidity in favour of productive ageing. Optimists look to a scenario of Lifespan Extension , where scarce health resources are not expended for incremental gains in life expectancy but rather for basic research to postpone or eliminate ageing. Finally, those who emphasize Voluntary Acceptance of Limits identify the meaning of old age with voluntary acceptance of finitude, where claims of future generations might limit longevity for any one generation. Thus, contrasting meanings such as quality of life, productive ageing, indefinite survival and voluntary limits entail very different consequences for the allocation of scarce resources across age-groups and among sub-groups of the elderly population.
Journal of Aging and Identity | 2001
Larry Polivka; Harry R. Moody
This article presents a debate on the issue of autonomy in aging policy held at the 1994 annual meeting of the American Society on Aging held in San Francisco, California. Harry R. Moody, director of the Institute for Human Values in Aging at Hunter College, supports a reconceptualized notion of personal autonomy which focuses on issues of power, theory, and practice, and finds conflicts between autonomy and justice in the lived world of the elderly and disabled. In aging policy, he promotes an emphasis on social movements such as Hospice rather than on autonomy of individuals. He suggests alternatives to extreme paternalism or complete autonomy, such as a communicative ethics approach. Larry Polivka, director of the Florida Policy Exchange Center on Aging at the University of South Florida, affirms that policy for the aging and disabled should be based ona commitment to autonomy. He describes an integrated model for long-term care that places autonomy first and includes features of communicative ethics and the negotiated consent and virtues models of ethics.
Archive | 1995
Harry R. Moody
Let me begin with a semantic question: How do we describe the enterprise? What do we call the subject of this conference for which we are gathered here in Finland? Several labels suggest themselves.
Gerontologist | 1988
Harry R. Moody
Gerontologist | 1992
Harry R. Moody
Hastings Center Report | 1994
Harry R. Moody
Gerontologist | 2008
Harry R. Moody
Gerontologist | 2006
Harry R. Moody
Generations (San Francisco, Calif.) | 1998
Harry R. Moody
Hastings Center Report | 1995
Tony Yang-Lewis; Harry R. Moody