News | National
21 Nov 2025 4:52
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    As people live longer and healthier, nurse training needs to respond to avoid ageist attitudes

    Ageism influences how people’s health concerns are interpreted. Symptoms can be dismissed as normal ageing, and older people don’t receive the treatment they need.

    Samantha Heath, Senior Lecturer in Nursing , University of Waikato
    The Conversation


    Life expectancy in New Zealand has increased dramatically over the past five decades. In 1970, men lived on average to 68. Today, it’s over 80.

    These gains reflect major advances in public health and medical technology. But living longer can mean more years with multiple chronic conditions and disabilities, because age is a significant risk factor for most disease.

    This demographic shift will reshape healthcare. Future health professionals will need to be aware of the increasingly complex social, technological and ethical challenges of caring for older people.

    Ageism, or discrimination based on a person’s age, should be considered as one of these challenges.

    Age influences how health concerns are interpreted. In a recent World Health Organization report, nearly 60% of health professionals admitted to making age-based (or ageist) assumptions about their patients’ abilities or needs.

    Genuine symptoms are dismissed as part of normal ageing, leading to flawed decisions. There is evidence that older people are also under-treated, raising the risk of disease progression.

    Other consequences include missed diagnoses. Inequalities occur where there is limited access to services or inclusion criteria are set to exclude people over 65.

    There is the potential for this kind of thinking to creep into health professional education. It shows up in stereotypes that appear in case studies for learning, or in the way programmes are structured and in the kinds of clinical placements that are used.

    Why ageism matters in healthcare

    Our national nursing programme review in the polytechnic sector looked at New Zealand student nurses’ experiences.

    It shows case studies often favoured information about older people with dementia, falls or end of life care. They rarely reflected active ageing or older adults’ resilience and agency.

    Health professionals may adopt ageist attitudes from the rest of society. Student nurses begin their training programmes having been subject to both societal and cultural narratives about the role and importance of older people.

    Nurse education programmes often communicated underlying beliefs about the complexity of care. Placements in aged residential care were typically scheduled in the first year of nursing, implying the work was basic if new students could do it.

    Almost all nursing students were allocated to an aged-care facility where the frailest 7% of older people live. This reinforces a narrative that older adults are a homogeneous population of dependent, vulnerable people.

    It misses the opportunity to teach health promotion for people who are older but remain active and independent.

    What students saw

    Students’ reflections highlighted the realities of aged residential care and the impact of their perceptions. One participant said:

    While on placement, I saw how conveyor belt life was for the residents. It broke my heart. Residents had lost their individual identities and all fun was gone. The nurses and healthcare assistant staff were all so busy and didn’t have much time to interact on personal levels with each resident.

    Others noted systemic issues:

    People [nurses and carers] in aged residential care do not get paid what they are worth. This severely needs to be changed. They work so hard to not get appreciated as much as they deserve. [They are] constantly understaffed making the workload insurmountable and overwhelming.

    Some worried about career stigma:

    Being a new graduate and working in aged care would make me unemployable in other areas of nursing.

    These comments illustrate how education and system design shape the attitudes of the future nursing workforce towards ageing and aged care. They also highlight the crucial role clinical placements have in shaping future career choices.

    Tackling ageism starts in education

    The programme review and student comments demonstrate how ageism influences learning, from case studies portraying older people as less capable to placements that equate ageing with frailty and funding systems that appear to devalue older people.

    Addressing these issues starts with obvious steps, such as more appropriate design of learning materials and using placements that reflect a spectrum of health needs in later life.

    For students who have little experience of older people, fostering inter-generational connection and building empathy can be a powerful tool to reduce ageist stereotypes.

    But there is one more area to which we should be alert: ageism is in fact an emerging social determinant of health in later life.

    There is a high risk that ageism will compound existing health inequities as Maori, Pacific people and rainbow communities grow older

    Preparing the future healthcare workforce means recognising the diverse realities of ageing in contemporary New Zealand. If we want healthcare to meet the needs of an ageing population, education must reflect this complexity.

    Tackling ageism in healthcare professional education is a critical first step.

    The Conversation

    Samantha Heath received funding from MBIE Te Whitinga Fellowship to complete this research. She previously worked in the polytechnic sector. She acknowledges the contribution of co-researchers from across New Zealand during the course of the study.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     21 Nov: Two people have been killed in a crash between a car and a truck on State Highway 1, north of Timaru
     20 Nov: The Wellington Phoenix men are taking their final home match of the A-League season to Christchurch
     20 Nov: When did kissing evolve and did humans and Neanderthals get off with each other? New research
     20 Nov: A new index challenges common beliefs about drug use and harm in NZ
     20 Nov: As AI leader Nvidia posts record results, Warren Buffett’s made a surprise bet on Google
     20 Nov: A man's appeared in court charged with the murder of another man in New Plymouth last night
     20 Nov: Richard Lewer’s I Only Talk to God When I Want Something: a potent exploration of faith and suffering
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    How risky will All Blacks coach Scott Robertson be in his final selection of the year? More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Our largest sheep-meat exporter, Alliance Group, has returned to profit - as it prepares for the arrival of a new majority owner More...



     Today's News

    Motoring:
    Two people have been killed in a crash between a car and a truck on State Highway 1, north of Timaru 4:37

    Business:
    Our largest sheep-meat exporter, Alliance Group, has returned to profit - as it prepares for the arrival of a new majority owner 21:57

    Entertainment:
    Kris Jenner's Christmas party "might be a little smaller than previous years" 21:55

    Entertainment:
    Lady Gaga was on lithium while filming A Star Is Born 21:25

    International:
    How politicians could combat doubts about Epstein files release 21:07

    Entertainment:
    Eddie Murphy doesn't "think about winning trophies" 20:55

    Entertainment:
    Christy Martin has launched a heartfelt defence of Sydney Sweeney following recent criticism of the actress 20:25

    Entertainment:
    Gaten Matarazzo's own grief helped inform his performance in Stranger Things season five 19:55

    Education:
    Schoolgirls the target of mass abductions in Nigeria 19:47

    Entertainment:
    Nitin Ganatra "almost got fired" from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory after Johnny Depp got him "into trouble" 19:25


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd