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Used to be, someone who was 16 was considered a (young) Adult, ready to live on their own, start a family, be responsible for themselves and others. Now that point is at least a decade later.
She laughed and pointed out to him that his daughter was old enough to be considered high risk due to age, but he said he had a neighbor who was 104, so those are "the elderly" he was really worried about.
I think your sense of "old" also has a lot to do with the people you know!
(FWIW, both grandpa and his neighbor survived covid. Grandpa's still healthy as a horse as he sneaks up on 90, but his neighbor has since passed away peacefully.)
Anyway, I think it is really hard to read from the article if the perception of when someone is old increases over:
time of history (e.g, a 25 year old in 1996 considered 30 old, but a 25 year old in 2020 considers 35 old),
or increases over time of ones age (e.g, a 25 year old considers 30 old, but a 30 year old considers 40 old)
Nutrition and medicine have come a long way in the last 50-60 years. I also think that growing up during the Depression and WWII aged an entire generation before its time.