Sunday, February 8, 2026

Tests for aging well: First test

If you read The New York Times, you may have already seen this article: “Are You Aging Well? Try These Simple Tests to Find Out.” A challenge!

To keep my posts short (and provide material for four posts), I’m going to describe one of these tests per post, along with my test results. Here is the first test:

Go from standing to sitting on the floor, and back up again, using the least amount of support as possible.

Here’s a link to a video showing a man (in his 20s?) doing the test. CLINIMEX: Sitting-rising test (SRT) - an updated 2025 video . On the first try he uses one hand. On the second try he doesn't.  (It’s in Portuguese or something, but there are captions.)

The test is scored on a 10-point scale—5 points for sitting down and 5 points for getting up. You lose a point for every hand, knee or other body part you use to help yourself.  The article says that if you’re in your 30s and 40s, you should score a perfect 10. If you’re over 60 and get an 8, you’re in “very good shape.” 

My result: I used both hands and both knees to get down to the floor and the same for getting up, so I lost 8 points, giving me a score of 2. (First, I got down to my hands and knees to sit down, then I got back onto my hands and knees to stand up.) Pitiful score, but hey, I got down and up!

Supposedly this test is a predictor of mortality. A study that looked at more than 4,000 people, aged 46 to 75, found that, over the course of 12 years, the people who scored 4 or below had death rates nearly four times higher than those who scored a 10. Apparently, that’s because people with low scores were at a higher risk for falls.

 What if, like me, you’re 89? Isn’t my 2 worth something? Evidence of life?

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1 comment:

  1. I could do all those moves until my late 70s, but it's too much for me now in my 90s, Aging well? The definition is too vague.

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