“…In fact, of the 28 articles reviewed for this study, we found that 14 used the terminology older (Bayliss, 2000;Comerford, Henson-Stroud, Sionainn, & Wheeler, 2004;Fullmer et al, 1999;Hall & Fine, 2005;Hash & Netting, 2009;Jacobson, 1995;Jones & Nystrom, 2002;Neustifter, 2008;Parks & Hughes, 2007;Pettinato, 2008;Richard & Brown, 2006;Shenk & Fullmer, 1996;Wojciechowski, 1998;Zaritsky & Dibble, 2010). Six articles used the term old (Barnes, 2005;Cruikshank, 2008;Drumm, 2004;Healey, 1994;Jacobson & Samdahl, 1998;Lev, 2009), three articles used aging or ageing (Phillips & Marks, 2008;Thompson, Brown, Cassidy, & Gentry, 1999;Tully, 1989), one used elder (Goldberg et al, 2005), one used elderly (Healy, 2002), one referred to their 50-to 60-year-old participants as later midlife (Finnegan & McNally, 2000) and another stated their participants were late middle age and old (Butler & Hope, 1999). Nystrom and Jones (2003) used different terms depending on which chronological group they discussed but mainly used aging and old.…”