This lady is amazing!!
People in rich countries are getting older. But is a longer life always a better life? In the first of a series about the ageing population, Smitha Mundasad looks at whether we can influence the rate at which we age.
At 95 years old, Olga Kotelko could be forgiven for sitting on the sidelines as people 60 years her junior jump over poles and hurl javelins into the distance.
But this sprightly 5ft-tall Canadian joins in - in a big way.
This year she became the oldest recorded female indoor sprinter, high jumper, long jumper and triple jumper at the World Masters Athletics Championships.
People in rich countries are getting older. But is a longer life always a better life? The Older We Get is a series looking at the challenges of old age and how they can be met by an ageing population
Olga now has more than 30 world records to her name and has won more than 750 gold medals.
But she says she sees herself as nothing special, describing herself "as just a plain Jane".
Olga took to the athletics track at the age of 77.
more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-27207219