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| Aging With Grace: What the Nun Study Teaches Us About Leading Longer, Healthier, and More Meaningful Lives | 
enlarge | Author: David Snowdon Publisher: Bantam Discount Category: Book
Selling Price: $15.00 Buy Used: $7.94 Potential Savings: $7.06 (47%)
New (37) Used (27) from $7.94
Customer Ratings: 25 comments
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (pounds): 0.5 Dimensions (inch): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 0553380923 Dewey Decimal Number: 618 EAN: 9780553380927
Publication Date: April 30, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Good, solid and clean copy. Light cover and usage wear. Blue mark on text edge. SHIPS FAST! 100A
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Inspiration, insight and hope into the aging process December 11, 2008 As the daughter of an aging parent, I am interested in learning as much as I can about the aging process for the sake of my mother, myself and other family members/friends. This book is a gem. It is a moving and personal account by the scientist who led an amazing longitudinal study of a group of nuns. This study was unique in a way that no other Alzheimer's study has been.
As I read the book, I felt as though I was walking alongside the author, David Snowdon, and getting to know each and every nun. It was a privilege to share David's insight into this special community of women (many of whom live past the age of 100). When David finally decided to focus his research on Alzheimer's, he struggled with asking the nuns to sign a release form for their brains to be donated to Alzheimer research (after death). He was astonished when Sister Rita Schwalbe spoke up and said, "As sisters, we made the hard choice not to have children. Through brain donation, we can help unravel the mysteries of Alzheimer's disease and give the gift of life in a new way to future generations."
Although Alzheimers is still a mystery in many ways, this study helped illuminate several correlations. Depression and stroke puts a person at risk. High density ideas/complex sentences found in the nuns'handwritten autobiographies seemed to diminish risk. Faith and community, purposeful work and service, healthy eating, exercise all seemed to be positive factors in prevention.
Since 50% of persons over 90 years old will get Alzheimers, it is likely that many of our family/friends will be touched by this disease. Reading this book is not only a joy in getting insight into this wonderful community of nuns but also in highlighting the risk factors and research being done around the disease of Alzheimer's. Dale C http://daleblogg.blogspot.com ("Transition Aging Parents")
Alzheimer February 15, 2008 My mother, grand mother and great grandmother have had Alzheimer. This book has helped me a lot to understand the sickness and given me good ideas of what to do with the rest of my life. Thanks
Not what I thought.... September 29, 2007 1 out of 1 found this comment useful.
I really thought this would be a dry scientific book about results, showing graphs, etc, but it was not at all! The nuns told him he could only study them if he promised to get to know them, and he followed their wishes completely. I'm trying to make my sentences as long as possible and if you read the book, you'll know why and think I'm hopeless! The author has a wonderful way of weaving their lives into what he has discovered, as he leaves each little pause in the chapters with a sentence to make you want to read the next to see what they discovered about it. I learned a lot about what we have a little influence over in our own physical lives and what we might not. It's a very easy read. Oops! Short sentence. My bad!
Very Inspirational for young researchers July 23, 2007 1 out of 1 found this comment useful.
As a young geriatrist and researcher I found Dr Snowdon's scientific experience told in such a personal way very inspirational, puts into perpective and unwraps much of what aging and clinical research is about. I found also amazing his ability to read details in each of the nuns lives named in the book to make conclusions related to how to become old in a "longer, healthier and more meaningful" way. A "must read" book for everyone interested in gerontology...perhaps all of us: the aging people.
Great read for many reasons January 23, 2007 3 out of 3 found this comment useful.
Ordered for a class related to epidemiology and nursing. Turns out i would have loved it regardless. A scientist collects data from a unique nun population in search of data which leads him on a extensive journey related to Alzheimer's disease. Personal and subjective. Informative and endearing. Would and have recommended to many. Easy read.
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