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Although we are primarily interested in the housing consumption of the elderly, we did not limit our analysis to the householders aged 62 and older. For comparison purposes, we looked at all householders. We did this by segregating the householder population into seven age cohorts. The number of age cohorts is large enough to let us capture changes in housing consumption over individuals’ lifecycle, without being overly burdensome on the analysis. The cohort widths have been defined such that they can mirror reasonable life bands. For example, people younger than age 35 are most likely. | e-Health and the Elderly How Seniors Use the Internet for Health Information Kaiser Family Foundation January 2005 ntALIn UAHt PHtSUHIPIIUN THE HENRY J. KAISER FAMIIY FOUNDATION ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Research directed by and report written by Victoria Rideout M.A. vice president and director Program for the Study of Entertainment Media and Health in collaboration with Tricia Neuman Sc.D. vice president and director Medicare Policy Project Michelle Kitchman Ph.D. Senior Policy Analyst Medicare Policy Project and Mollyann Brodie Ph.D. vice president and director Public Opinion and Media Research Program Kaiser Family Foundation. Layout and design by Leahandah Soundy Additional graphics by Theresa Boston ABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Methodology 2 Key Findings 3 Conclusion Survey Toplines 11 .