The United States is an aging society. In 2009, the number of people 65 years of age or older numbered 39.6 million. By 2030, there will be approximately 72.1 million older Americans.1 With the aging population comes an increase in chronic and degenerative diseases. Chronic diseases often emerge later in life as a result of years of exposure to detrimental behavioral risk factors. Addressing these detrimental modifiable behaviors at any stage in life will greatly reduce the burden chronic and degenerative diseases have on our society.