Minneapolis oldsters, Jessica Finlay has your back.
Finlay, 28, an environmental gerontologist at the University of Minnesota, has made fascinating discoveries with broad implications for city planners, architects and builders.
In her chosen field, the one she hopes to pursue as her life's work after getting a doctorate in 2018, Finlay's focus is senior citizens and how they interact physically and emotionally with their homes and neighborhoods.
Finlay found that seniors love skyways, dread icy sidewalks and joke about being killed while trying to cross a busy street — even with the light and in a crosswalk.
For some, their surroundings offer a robust menu of stimulation and golden-years fulfillment. Others are fearful and isolated.
Finlay studies seniors using the statistical and demographic tools of a geographer along with the more intuitive skills of a social worker. In the past year and a half she interviewed 125 seniors living independently (average age 71) in downtown, north Minneapolis and Eden Prairie.
After she posted fliers and talked about her research at senior centers, more than 300 seniors contacted her, wanting to be included. After a sit-down interview at each participant's house, Finlay put away her tape recorder and did a touring interview.
"I would go shopping, for groceries, to a doctor's appointment, swimming, to child care," Finlay said. "I sought to gauge their health status, their happiness quotient, their environment both at home and outside their houses, how they felt about their surroundings."