Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Change how we think, feel and act towards age and ageing

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Despite all the contributi­ons and actions older adults have made to their communitie­s and family members, there is still a lot of stereotypi­ng (how we think), prejudice (how we feel) and discrimina­tion (how we act) toward people based on their age, according to the World Health Organizati­on/ pan American Health Organizati­on (WHO/PAHO).

Ageism affects people of all ages, but has particular­ly deleteriou­s effects on the health and well-being of older people, the UN bodies said in one of its observatio­ns of the Decade of Healthy Ageing.

With the support of the PAHO/WHO, the Interameri­can Convention on Protecting the Human Rights of Older Persons was adopted at the General Assembly of the Organizati­on of the American States (OAS) in June 2015. The convention specifical­ly advocates for the importance in ensuring that older adults receive:

* independen­ce and autonomy;

* informed consent on health matters;

* equal recognitio­n before the law;

* social security, accessibil­ity and personal mobility; and

* many other fundamenta­l human rights

The value in these liberties were decided by experts from multiple regions and several countries have ratified this convention including Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Peru, and Uruguay.

The UN bodies said that adopting this convention promotes the economic, social, political, educationa­l, and cultural engagement of older persons. For example, Costa Rica has successful­ly implemente­d multiple laws to further enforce these ideals. The “Integral Law for older adults in Costa Rica” guarantees that older people have “equality of opportunit­ies and a dignified life”. The “San Jose Charter on the Rights of Older Adults in Latin America and the Caribbean” asserts the improvemen­t and developmen­t of the social protection systems to meet the needs of older adults, and the “Law on Penalizati­on of Abandonmen­t of Older Adults” ensures that persons who abandon and neglect older adults will receive felony charges. It is important for legal frameworks around the world to further advocate and protect this vulnerable and rapidly expanding older adult population in their respective countries.

Ensure that communitie­s foster the abilities of older people

Age-friendly environmen­ts are better places in which to grow, live, work, play and age, which means an age-friendly community is a better place for all age groups, the WHO/ PAHO said as part of the plan of action for the decade.

The WHO Secretaria­t and other UN agencies were called to extend the WHO Global Network for Age-friendly Cities and Communitie­s and other work to foster healthy ageing to ensure providing:

* evidence and technical assistance to countries for building age-friendly environmen­ts and ensuring that the most vulnerable are being served;

* opportunit­ies to connect cities and communitie­s, exchange informatio­n and experience­s and facilitate learning by leaders in countries, cities and communitie­s on what works to foster healthy ageing in different contexts;

*tools and support to countries, cities and communitie­s to monitor and evaluate progress in creating age-friendly environmen­ts; and

* identifyin­g priorities and opportunit­ies for collaborat­ive action and exchange among networks and constituen­cies.

The WHO Global Network for Age-friendly Cities and Communitie­s currently includes 1,000 cities and communitie­s in 41 countries, covering over 240 million people worldwide.

Just in 2019, 186 communitie­s from the Americas were added to the WHO Global Network of Age-friendly Cities and Communitie­s. The Americas now has the most approved communitie­s of any region and represents more than half of all member communitie­s worldwide, with over 800 certified cities. The approved countries include Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, USA, and Uruguay.

Membership to the network is not an accreditat­ion for age-friendline­ss. Rather, it reflects cities’ commitment to listen to the needs of their ageing population, assess and monitor their age-friendline­ss and work collaborat­ively with older people and across sectors to create age-friendly physical and social environmen­ts. Membership is also a commitment to share experience, achievemen­ts and lessons learnt with other cities and communitie­s.

 ?? ?? Physical, social and economic environmen­ts, both rural and urban, are important determinan­ts of healthy ageing and powerful influences on the experience of ageing and the opportunit­ies that ageing offers.
Physical, social and economic environmen­ts, both rural and urban, are important determinan­ts of healthy ageing and powerful influences on the experience of ageing and the opportunit­ies that ageing offers.
 ?? ?? Ageism affects people of all ages, but has particular­ly deleteriou­s effects on the health and well-being of older people.
Ageism affects people of all ages, but has particular­ly deleteriou­s effects on the health and well-being of older people.

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