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UN
Calls for Active Older Citizens Healthcare
By Hameed Shaheen, Pakistan
Observer
April
10, 2012
Image Credit: Reuters
Islamabad—United Nations
Chief Mr Ban Ki-moon has underlined the urgency for providing active
healthcare services to older citizens advising countries to make
available adequate resources to help their ageing populations lead a
healthful and vibrant life, says his World Health Day (WHD) message.
The WHD is a global event reminding the UN member countries to divert
their resources also towards betterment of the senior citizens.
“I urge governments, civil society and the private sector to commit
attention and resources to ensuring that people everywhere have the
chance to grow older in good health,” said Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon in his message to mark WHD which is observed annually to mark
the anniversary of the founding of the World Health Organization (WHO).
Each year a theme is selected that highlights a priority area of
concern for the UN’s health agency. This year’s theme, Good health adds
life to years , focuses on promoting good health throughout
individuals’ lives to improve their chances of remaining health and
productive in later years.
According to WHO, in the middle of the last century there were 14
million people in the world aged 80 years or older. However, by 2050,
there will be almost 400 million people in this age group – with 100
million of them in China alone. Within the next five years, for the
first time in history, the population of people aged 65 and older will
outnumber children under the age of five.
In his message, Mr. Ban said that an increase in worldwide longevity is
putting pressure on countries’ health services.
“Older people make many valuable contributions to society – as family
members, as active participants in the workforce, and as volunteers
within communities. The wisdom they have gained throughout their lives
makes them a unique resource for society,” he said. “But more older
people also means an increased demand on healthcare and social security
systems.”
The UN chief noted that the greatest health threat for older people in
all countries is now overwhelmingly from non-communicable diseases,
with heart disease and strokes the biggest killers, and visual
impairment and dementia the biggest causes of disability. He underlined
that in low-income countries in particular, the incidence of
non-communicable diseases is two to three times greater than in
high-income countries.
“This burden is carried not just by older people, but by their families
and by society as a whole,” Mr. Ban said, adding that it is essential
for these countries to count with the infrastructure and resources to
deal with existing needs, and cope with the much greater demands
expected in the future.
Earlier this week, WHO’s Director-General, Margaret Chan, emphasized
that measures to improve the quality of life of ageing populations need
not be expensive, and encouraged governments to implement affordable
and practical policies that can significantly help their citizens grow
old in a healthy manner.
“We must not let money or lack of access to care decide who stays fit
and who gets frail too soon,” Ms. Chan said in a roundtable discussion
on the theme of the Day in Geneva, Switzerland, on Wednesday.
“Simple interventions can have a huge impact. For example, hypertension
control, using extremely affordable medicines, contributes greatly to
increased longevity yet only around 10 per cent of older people in the
developing world benefit from this treatment,” she said. “Regular
moderate physical activity has a rejuvenating effect, working to turn
back the clock. Ancient Chinese Tai Chi exercises can restore balance
in older people and help prevent falls.”
Ms. Chan underscored that the incidence of non-communicable diseases in
older people require a shift in focus from providing care for a single
disease to providing good health in the face of multiple diseases.
To mark World Health Day, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is carrying out a series of events in
Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the West Bank, highlighting the plight
of ageing populations, which include medical activities such as blood
screenings, but also theatrical performances on the theme of active
ageing.
“In 2004, around 420,000 refugees registered with UNRWA were older than
60,” said the Director of UNRWA’s health programme, Akihiro Seita. “In
2011, the number increased to around 630,000, which is 12 per cent of
the entire refugee population.”
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