That kind of headline is almost always fear-based clickbait. There is no universal rule that you should “never accept something” from people over 70 or 80.
What matters is what the thing is, not the person’s age.
🧠 Why these headlines are misleading
They usually:
- Try to create fear or urgency
- Generalize older adults unfairly
- Skip important context (medical, financial, or safety details)
Age alone is not a risk factor for wrongdoing or danger.
⚠️ What actually deserves caution (regardless of age)
Instead of focusing on age, be careful with:
💊 Medications or supplements
- Never take unknown pills from anyone
- Always verify with a doctor or pharmacist
💰 Money or financial requests
- Be cautious of unsolicited transfers or “urgent help” requests
- This applies to all ages, especially in scams
📞 Phone or online requests
- Don’t share OTPs, passwords, or personal info
- Scam calls can come from anyone pretending to be authority
❤️ Important reality check
Older adults (70–80+) are:
- Often more medically experienced
- Frequently taking prescribed medications
- Not inherently unsafe or unreliable
Generalizing them is misleading and unfair.
📌 Bottom line
There is nothing specific you must “never accept” just because someone is over 70 or 80. Safety depends on context, source, and trust—not age.
If you want, you can share the full article or claim you saw, and I can break down exactly what part is real and what part is exaggerated.