Facts About the Aging Lesbian and Gay Community
Newsweek
September 18, 2008
Over the next 25 years, persons in America who are 65 and older are expected
to grow from about 12 to 20 percent of the total population. Estimates indicate
that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered individuals will comprise 7 to 10
percent of that senior population.
Gay seniors are twice as likely as straights to live alone, and 10 times less
likely to have someone to care for them should they fall ill, according to SAGE.
Ninety percent of gay retirees have no children, and nearly 80 percent are
single, according to some estimates.
Gay men are at higher risk for HIV, hepatitis and other sexually-transmitted
infections, and evidence suggests this may be especially true for older gay men.
* Despite infection rates that remain level, people over 50 now make up the
fastest-growing segment of those living with HIV. Between 1990 and 2005, the
number of AIDS cases among people over 50 increased more than 700
percent--today, 35 percent of people with HIV are 50 and older, and 70 percent
are over 40, according to the AIDS Community Research Initiative of America (ACRIA).
Gay seniors are half as likely to have health insurance coverage than their
straight counterparts, according to the Williams Institute.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, 76 percent of the general public
supports laws to protect gay men and lesbians from discrimination in employment.
Most also support giving benefits to same-sex partners, including inheritance
rights, employer-provided health insurance and Social Security.
A survey conducted for SAGE's Long Term Care Task Force found that only 13
percent of long-term care facilities include sensitivity training on sexual
orientation.
A study by the Milwaukee County Department for the Aging found that the
city's gay and lesbian seniors were five times less likely than straight seniors
to access needed services if they feared discrimination.