Waterloo Region Record

Why healthy aging must be the upshot of the COVID-19 pandemic

- JOHN MUSCEDERE John Muscedere is the scientific director and CEO of the Canadian Frailty Network and a professor in the School of Medicine at Queen’s University and an intensivis­t at Kingston Health Sciences Centre.

Last month, while the world was distracted by political turmoil and the pandemic’s roaring second wave, a very significan­t proclamati­on came and went with little fanfare. The United Nations General Assembly launched 20202030 as the Decade of Healthy Aging, calling for a decade of concerted global action to extend the health and wellbeing horizons of the world’s one billion people over the age of 60.

In contrast to a common mispercept­ion, aging alone isn’t what sidelines older people — frailty is. While aging is inevitable, frailty is not.

Frailty is defined as a medical condition of reduced function and health; it becomes more common as we age. Frailty increases vulnerabil­ity to disease, resulting in the need for intensive and costly health-care interventi­ons. Today, 1.6 million Canadians live with some form of frailty. In 10 years, it will be 2.5 million.

Living within the guardrails of a pandemic has aged everyone. And we are getting a glimpse into how the seeds of frailty are sown — through loneliness and isolation, loss of structure and routine, mental and emotional stress, physical exhaustion, loss of freedom and a sense of control, disruption­s in eating and sleeping habits, weight gain, muscle loss and deferring routine medical appointmen­ts to avoid the virus.

Our response to the global pandemic now, and in the coming years, should include robust policies for healthy aging, which in large part are composed of strategies to address these contributo­rs to frailty.

Persistent news coverage about the vulnerabil­ity of older people in the early days of the pandemic inadverten­tly fuelled ageist attitudes. In its most extreme form, some people wrongly concluded that the economy should not have to shut down just to prevent the virus from killing the eldest members of society. After all, this demographi­c contribute­s the least, right?

From both a moral and economic standpoint, this is a deeply flawed viewpoint. More and more, out of choice or necessity, healthy older Canadians are remaining engaged in paid labour beyond convention­al retirement age. In 2010, 14 per cent of people 55 and over were active in the labour force. By 2031, this number is expected to rise to almost double.

The unpaid labour of this age group often goes unrecogniz­ed. A life of accumulate­d skills and knowledge is poured freely into raising funds for community projects and organizati­ons, co-ordinating events, caring for children in the absence of child-care options, coaching sports and passing knowledge and skills on to young people. Or even worse, we sideline these skills by not putting in place ways that we can better harness this experience.

Statistics Canada reported that, in 2013-14, 36 per cent of seniors performed volunteer work. Those aged 65 and up volunteere­d 223 hours a year, well above the national average of 156 hours. In 2012, baby boomers and senior adults clocked one billion volunteer hours. In strictly fiscal terms, Canadians aged 65 and older also have money to spend. Many continue to benefit from earnings-based retirement plans and other progressiv­e senior-focussed social and financial policies launched in the late 20th century.

Older Canadians are an economic pillar, one that will crumble in the absence of supports for healthy aging. The past year has been a valuable lesson on the importance of nurturing our functional ability, especially in older people. Let’s turn insight into action.

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