WHEN
Helen Clark brought her father-in-law, then 83, to the doctor last
year, she knew his mind was slowing, but a mental status exam confirmed
it. He knew the year, where he lived and the name of the president. But
when the doctor asked him to count backward from 100, subtracting seven
from each number — 100, 93, 86, 79 — a look of confusion washed over his
face.
Studies show
that the ability to perform simple math problems, as well as handling
financial matters, are typically one of the first set of skills to
decline in diseases of the mind, like Alzheimer’s, and Ms. Clark’s
father-in-law, who suffered from mild dementia, was no exception.
Research has also shown that even cognitively normal people may reach a
point where financial decision-making becomes more challenging.
“A
person can appear to have their wherewithal cognitively, but not have
the ability to understand money in the same way anymore,” said Ms.
Clark, a retired registered nurse and family therapist in Cottonwood,
Calif.
The
issue looms large, particularly as the number of older people continues
to rapidly expand: There are 44.7 million people 65 and older,
representing 14 percent of the population, according to the most recent
census data, but, within 10 years, they will swell to an estimated 66
million. This group collectively holds trillions of dollars in wealth,
but are often left to manage their own finances, even as they become
increasingly vulnerable. About half of adults in their 80s either have
dementia, or at least some cognitive impairment without dementia, researchers said.
“If you can detect emerging financial impairment early, you can also step in early and protect the person,” said Daniel Marson,
a neuropsychologist and director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Center at
the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “It may be if you step in two
months from now, they won’t be in a position to make a poor decision or
be exploited a year from now.”
For
Ms. Clark’s father-in-law, Francis Taylor, the intervention came too
late. At 80 years old, he married a woman 17 years his junior, who, over
their three-year union, according to the family, cashed $40,000 in
blank checks sent by his credit-card issuer and emptied the contents of
his $123,000 annuity, leaving him with little more than a giant tax
bill.
Mr.
Taylor, a former diesel mechanic and Korean War veteran, gave his wife
permission to make two annuity withdrawals over the phone. But his wife,
who couldn’t be reached for comment, made 20 more withdrawals on her
own by using her husband’s Social Security
number and other identifying information, and signing papers to direct
money into a joint account, according to documents provided by Ms.
Clark. After an internal investigation, MetLife, the annuity provider,
concluded that it had followed proper procedures.
Preventing
these situations is often difficult. Knowing exactly when to get
involved can be fraught, whether you are an adult child or a trusted
adviser. There are a series of early warning signs of financial decline,
which Dr. Marson identified in a recent study, which is being submitted
for publication and was funded by the National Endowment for Financial Education and the National Institute on Aging.
The
signs, while perhaps not surprising, are subtle, making them easy to
miss: It may become more difficult for people to identify the risks in a
particular investment, and they may focus too much on the benefits.
Completing various tasks on a financial to-do list may start to take
longer, such as preparing bills for the mail. Everyday math may become
more laborious or prone to errors, whether that’s figuring out a tip in a
restaurant or doing a calculation that requires two steps. Financial
concepts, like medical deductibles and minimum balances required in
savings accounts, may also become harder to grasp. Naturally, these
behaviors should represent a significant change: If a person was never
adept with personal finances, this won’t serve as much of an indicator.
Dr.
Marson said he identified these warnings signs as part of a study of
138 older adults over time who were initially deemed “cognitively
normal” by a panel of four doctors when they joined the study (and after
at least one annual follow-up visit). Participants were also timed as
they completed financial tasks in a lab. Twenty-three members of the
group later received a diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment, but when
the researchers went back and looked at the original results of the
financial capacity test — when the group members were deemed cognitively
normal — there were already subtle signs of slowing and financial
decline.
“The group that would later decline already had some emerging signs,” Dr. Marson said, though they weren’t glaring.
While many people continue
to handle their finances with ease well into their later years, even
people with healthy brains tend to experience cognitive decline.
According to one study,
which analyzed participants’ propensity to make financial mistakes, a
person’s financial decision-making ability peaks at age 53, or, more
generally, in their 50s. This is the sweet spot, the paper said, because
they have substantial amounts of experience but they have had only
modest declines in their ability to solve new problems.
There
is a general tendency for our ability to solve new problems — known as
fluid intelligence — to slowly decline over time, starting as early as
age 20. But this is at least partly offset by our growing experiences
and wisdom, known as crystallized intelligence.
David Laibson,
an economics professor at Harvard and co-author of the research, said
he believed that crystallized intelligence tended to plateau when people
reached their 70s. That plateau, accompanied with declining fluid
intelligence, might explain why older consumers made more financial
mistakes than middle-age ones in his study.
“At
that point, vulnerability increases,” Professor Laibson said. “Our
nation’s wealth is disproportionately held by older adults, and they are
exactly the group, particularly as they reach their 80s and 90s, that
are most vulnerable. But our system has the fewest protections for those
people.” (Continue reading)
Full Article & Source:
As Cognition Slips, Financial Skills Are Often the First to Go
But it takes a long time for people to get to the point that they can't handle their checkbook.
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