Geriatrics, Lifestyle Medicine and Healthy Aging: A Practical Guide is a book for those interested in promoting healthy aging through lifestyle approaches. The book is divided into three sections covering various aspects of lifestyle medicine for older individuals including general concepts of lifestyle medicine practices; lifestyle “pillars” as applied to older adults; and a broad range of target conditions of importance to older adults, and how a lifestyle medicine approach may impact them. Readers gain an understanding of how lifestyle medicine and geriatrics can work together to provide a holistic approach that fosters healthy aging throughout life.
Features
Research-supported analysis of the relevance of lifestyle medicine in geriatric populations Evidence-based discussion of conditions that impact quality of life in older adults, including sarcopenia, incontinence, bone health, polypharmacy and falls, and how lifestyle medicine can prevent and treat such conditions Edited by a leading expert in the fields of healthy aging and lifestyle medicine in older adults
As part of the Lifestyle Medicine Series edited by Dr. James M. Rippe, this book is useful to geriatric medicine clinicians who would like to increase the tools in their practice of caring for older adults; lifestyle medicine clinicians who want to understand how to effectively use lifestyle pillars to care for older adults; and anyone who is interested in their own, or a loved one’s, healthy aging.
Edited by:
Susan M. Friedman (University of Rochester New York USA)
Imprint: CRC Press
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
ISBN: 9781032632889
ISBN 10: 1032632887
Series: Lifestyle Medicine
Pages: 408
Publication Date: 30 September 2025
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
Section 1: General Principles 1.The Rationale for Lifestyle Medicine in Geriatrics 2. Promoting Healthy Aging: A Lifecycle Approach 3.The Reality of Aging 4.Confronting Ageism with Language and Lifestyle Medicine 5. Climate Change, Lifestyle Medicine and Older Adults 6.Lifestyle Medicine in a Geriatrics Primary Care Practice Section 2: Lifestyle Medicine pillars as applied to older adults 7. Why Exercise? Sedentarism, Physical Activity, and Exercise Among Older Adults 8. Physical Activity and Exercise Recommendations Among Older Adults 9. Nutrition Care for the Older Adult 10.Malnutrition in Older Adults – a Lifestyle Medicine Approach 11.Sleep and Older Adults 12.Social Connection – An Essential Lifestyle Pillar for Older Adults 13. Stress and Its Impact on Older Adults 14.Toxins and Older Adults Section 3: Target issues 15.Sarcopenia 16. Unlocking the Mind: Navigating the Landscape of Dementia and Elevating Brain Health in Later Life 17.Depression 18. Urinary Incontinence in Older Adults: A Lifestyle Medicine Approach 19.Resilience 20. Palliative Care in Older Adults: A Lifestyle Medicine Approach 21. Polypharmacy and Deprescribing 22.Caregiver Health 23.Reducing Fall Risk with Lifestyle Modifications 24. Obesity in Older Adults- Lifestyle Medicine Perspective 25. Osteoporosis and Bone Health 26. A Lifestyle Medicine Approach to Constipation
Susan Friedman, MD, MPH, has been a practicing geriatrician for over 30 years, and has spent more than a decade focusing on fostering healthy aging, incorporating geriatrics and lifestyle medicine into her clinical work, teaching, program development, research, and advocacy. She obtained her undergraduate, MD and MPH degrees from Northwestern University, and completed a General Internal Medicine residency and Geriatrics fellowship in the Johns Hopkins University system, based at Hopkins Bayview Hospital. She was on faculty at Johns Hopkins for 5 years before moving to the University of Rochester in 2000. Dr. Friedman is Professor of Medicine at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, in the Division of Geriatrics. She is the medical director of the university’s lifestyle medicine program based at Highland Hospital. She has authored more than 50 peer-reviewed papers, which have been cited more than 3000 times, and was the lead author of the American Geriatrics Society’s White Paper on Healthy Aging.