10 Facts About Aging In Today’s World

03/08/2016
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Aging In Today’s World:
As the World Changes, How We Age Changes too

 

It’s a fact, we’re all aging. It’s also a fact that as the world around us changes, the way we change, and the statistics about aging and health change too.

Today, for the first time in history, most people can expect to live into their sixties and beyond, according to the World Health Organization. A longer life represents an important opportunity, not only for older people and their families, but also for societies as a whole. Additional years provide the chance to pursue new activities such as further education or a long neglected passion, while continuing to make valuable contributions to family and community. Yet the extent of these opportunities depends heavily on one factor: health.

Here are the facts:

  1. The world’s population is rapidly aging
    The number of people aged 60 years or older will rise from 900 million to 2 billion between 2015 and 2050 (moving from 12% to 22% of the total global population). Population aging is happening more quickly than in the past. For example, while France had almost 150 years to adapt to a change from 10% to 20% in the proportion of the population that was older than 60 years, places like Brazil, China and India will have slightly more than 20 years to make the same adaptation.
     
  2. There is little evidence that older people today are in better health than their parents
    The proportion of older people in high-income countries needing help from another person to carry out basic activities such as eating and washing may have declined slightly over the past 30 years. However, there has been little change in the prevalence of less severe limitations in functioning.
     
  3. The most common health conditions in older age are non-communicable diseases
    Older people in low- and middle-income countries carry a greater disease burden than those in the rich world. Regardless of where they live the biggest killers of older people are heart disease, stroke and chronic lung disease. The greatest causes of disability are sensory impairments (particularly in low- and lower-middle-income countries), back and neck pain, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (particularly in low- and lower-middle-income countries), depressive disorders, falls, diabetes, dementia and osteoarthritis.
     
  4. When it comes to health, there is no ‘typical’ older person
    Biological aging is only loosely associated with person age in years. Some 80 year-olds have physical and mental capacities similar to many 20 year-olds. Other people experience declines in physical and mental capacities at much younger ages.
     
  5. Health in older age is not random
    Although some of the variations in older people’s health reflect their genetic inheritance, most is due to their physical and social environments, and the influence of these environments on their opportunities and health behavior. Importantly, these factors start to influence aging from childhood. This means that an older person from a disadvantaged background is both more likely to experience poor health and less likely to have access to the services and the care that they may need.
     
  6. Ageism may now be more pervasive than sexism or racism
    Ageism, discrimination against a person on the basis of their age, has serious consequences for older people and societies at large. Ageism can take many forms, including prejudicial attitudes, discriminatory practices, or policies that perpetuate ageist beliefs. It can obstruct sound policy development, and it can significantly undermine the quality of health and social care that older people receive.
     
  7. Comprehensive public health action will require fundamental shifts in how we think about aging and health
    Health in older age shouldn’t be defined by the absence of disease. Healthy Aging is achievable by every older person. It’s a process that enables older people to continue to do the things that are important to them. While health and social care expenditures for older people are often viewed as costs to society they should be understood as investments in realizing opportunities and enabling older people to continue to make their many positive contributions.
     
  8. Health systems need to be realigned to the needs of older populations
    Most health systems around the world are ill-prepared to address the needs of older people, who often have multiple chronic conditions or geriatric syndromes. Systems must be capable of providing older person-centered and integrated care, and focus on maintaining capacities as people age.
     
  9. In the 21st century, all countries need an integrated system of long-term care
    In some countries, this means building a system from almost nothing. In others, it means rethinking long-term care: from a basic safety net for the most vulnerable, towards a broader system that maximizes older people’s functional ability and upholds their autonomy and dignity. The number of older people who need support for activities of daily living in developing countries is forecast to quadruple by 2050.
     
  10. Healthy Aging involves all levels and sectors of government 
    Examples of intersectoral action include establishing policies and programs that expand housing options; making buildings and transport accessible; promoting age-diversity in working environments; and protecting older people from poverty through social protection schemes. Making progress on Healthy Aging will also require a far better understanding of age-related issues and trends.

 

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BLOG Date: Tuesday, March 8, 2016
Writer: Ryan Allen