elderliness


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Synonyms for elderliness

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References in periodicals archive ?
Moreover, the results also showed that high expenditure cases distributed in various age groups, indicating that elderliness was not a major influence factor for high medical expenses.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) revealed 1,892 criminal cases were dropped at courts in England and Wales in 2014 due to the "significant ill-health, elderliness or youth" of a defendant.
In addition, and as edentulousness had always used to be linked with elderliness, the loss of youth, femininity, and virility, patients usually seek for solutions for this condition, this necessitates a satisfactory treatment for this con- dition to always be available.14-16
Elderliness must have happened when I began to feel smart remembering to carry in my handbag a shawl in which to wrap myself not just inside the cinema, but outside it.
But over on The X Factor the elderliness of codger judges Louis Walsh and Ma Osbourne is a problem.
America is in the last stage of elderliness and the beginning of the first stage of old age." (17)
In contrast to the developed countries, however, there is a more pronounced tendency for health spending to increase with the elderliness of the population.
Old age, with respect to law and employment, means the era, where the working performance and efficiency of a person decreases.2 Generally, the age of 65 and above is considered to be the beginning of elderliness.3 Neugarten has categorised old age under three divisions chronologically: Young-old (65-74), medium-old (75-84) and old-old (85 and over).2