Shanghai Daily

The key to a ‘happy, healthy and long life’

- Yang Jian

Day care in China is not only for the young. It serves both ends of the age spectrum. For the elderly with working children or without in-home care, senior day care centers are a godsend that keeps them out of nursing homes.

No less a dignitary than President Xi Jinping praised the concept last week during a visit to a model elderly day care center in Hongkou District.

“It is our common wish that elderly people lead happy, healthy and long lives,” he said, stressing the need to implement aged care policies to benefit more people.

The center he visited is a demonstrat­ion site for how elderly facilities should operate. It treats seniors with dignity and warmth, providing a full array of activities, entertainm­ent and recovery therapies.

Feng Luxian, an 81-year-old retired architect, gives handicraft classes to help seniors retain their agility. He shows them how he builds delicate miniature wooden houses, one of his retirement passions.

His wife Yu Changzhu, 79, a former clinic doctor at a local textile company, also finds fulfillmen­t at the center by teaching other seniors how to weave mobile phone covers and coasters.

The couple began going to the center every day in June, after both had undergone surgical procedures.

“We stay at the center between 8:30am and 4pm every day, where we can play games, enjoy traditiona­l operas, chat with neighbors, enjoy lunch and see a doctor,” Yu said.

Due to the baby boom in the 1950s, Shanghai’s elderly population last year grew 5.6 percent from 2016. Those 60 years and older numbered 4.8 million at the end of 2017, comprising about a third of the city’s residents.

Hongkou, Huangpu and Putuo districts have the highest percentage­s of seniors.

Jiaxing is one of eight subdistric­ts in Hongkou and alone has nearly 40 percent of residents 60 years or older, said Li Qi, deputy director of the subdistric­t.

Some 90 percent of Shanghai’s seniors are cared for at home. The long and honored tradition of filial piety means that children are reluctant to put frail parents in nursing homes. But when children work or can’t be around all the time, parents may need support during the day.

To fulfill that need, the city has establishe­d 350 day care centers.

In Hongkou, 37 citizen service stations have been built, most of them with day care centers for seniors. The district aims to eventually have such centers within a 15-minute walk from each resident.

As a demonstrat­ion site, the center in the Jiaxing subdistric­t is adjacent to a community family clinic, staffed by three general practition­ers and a traditiona­l Chinese medicine doctor.

In addition, medical personnel from nearby Yueyang Hospital attached to the Shanghai University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine go to the center regularly to give physical checkups and health talks.

A community canteen operates alongside the center, where seniors can enjoy meals at affordable prices in a pleasant environmen­t. With subsidies from the government, a meat dish, such as pork chops, costs about 5 yuan (71 US cents), while vegetables cost 2 yuan — far cheaper than nearby restaurant­s.

The canteen receives 1,600 diners daily, including many nearby residents.

“Thanks to the canteen, we don’t have to go shopping at the wet market and then cook for ourselves,” Yu said. “Our sons used to worry that we might forget to turn off the gas.”

The day care center, which opened in February 2017, receives about 40 seniors every day. Their ages average 86, said Chen Yan, the head of the center.

“We aim to enhance the happiness and self-fulfillmen­t of the elderly rather than simply taking care of and feeding them,” she said.

Chen visited more than 60 elderly care homes and day care centers nationwide before designing a center that was both innovative and nurturing in its approach.

During

music

therapy sessions, for instance, each senior can choose a rhythm instrument and follow the beat of the music.

These small “concerts” help improve reaction times and agility. They are also a lot of fun, Chen said.

Another session, aromathera­py, allows seniors to smell different plants like lemongrass to help relax them, she added.

There are also classes in weaving, handicraft­s, painting, calligraph­y, poetry, singing and dancing.

More capable seniors can play pool or table tennis in the vestibule of the center. Psychologi­cal consultant­s are on hand to help those coping with loneliness.

The center also allows people like Feng and Yu to share their hobbies or former profession­s with other seniors, Chen said.

Xia Juanjuan, 82, a former elementary school teacher, shows other seniors how to recite and enjoy traditiona­l Chinese poetry.

Another senior, Zhu Deming, 87, shares his hobby of ink painting, which helped decorate the center.

Citywide, an additional 80 day care centers are being built this year with government subsidies and preferenti­al treatment on taxation and operating costs.

 ??  ?? Chen Yan (right), head of the elderly day care center in Hongkou’s JiaxingRoa­d subdistric­t, plays a game with residents who live nearby to help improve their reaction times. President Xi Jinping was at the center last week during his two-day inspection tour of Shanghai. The center provides daytime activities, meals and medical help for elderly people. — Bob Yang
Chen Yan (right), head of the elderly day care center in Hongkou’s JiaxingRoa­d subdistric­t, plays a game with residents who live nearby to help improve their reaction times. President Xi Jinping was at the center last week during his two-day inspection tour of Shanghai. The center provides daytime activities, meals and medical help for elderly people. — Bob Yang
 ??  ?? Chen Yan gives one of her popular musical therapy sessions. These small “concerts” can help to improve reaction times and agility, while raising self-esteem. — Tang Dafei
Chen Yan gives one of her popular musical therapy sessions. These small “concerts” can help to improve reaction times and agility, while raising self-esteem. — Tang Dafei

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