Ageing Healthy or Ageing Happy
Ageing Healthy or Ageing Happy
No one can escape ageing - a
process that everyone has to go through. Unless you have a way of living young,
please let me know! In New
Zealand , the Ministry of Health took ageing
seriously into their hands. Throughout the years, the government had committed
to ensure the healthy livelihood of New Zealanders so that they can live longer
and more independently.
From the information I have
currently gathered, health strategies for the ageing population in New Zealand are
currently being coordinated across government agencies, but being led by the
Ministry of Health (MOH). In December 2016, MOH released the Healthy Ageing
Strategy – including 48 priority actions to be rolled out over the first two
years. This is basically a revision of the same strategy that was implemented
in 2002 to ensure that the new strategy will reflect current issues and
opportunities for improving the health of older people. The government is playing their role to improve the health outcomes and independence of older people as they made significant contribution to and have an integral role in our society. But will that be enough by implementing these Strategies?
One of the research found based just on physical activity experiments by Aoyagi et al.(2010), investigated
the daily physical activities of older people by counting the steps they took
and the intensity of effort in other types of physical activities they made, but there was a lack of objective evidence on the patterns of habitual physical
activity associated with healthy ageing. To enhance health, the elders in this
controlled group were recommended by the physical activity guidelines for older people proposed by the American
College of Sports
Medicine and the American Heart Association, that they should perform aerobic
activities of moderate intensity for a minimum of 30 minutes on a 5 day week
schedule.. However, this experiment setting was limited by a recruitment bias
that tends to favour healthy members of the community in Nakanojo , Japan .
In conclusion of the experiment, the team found that health-related quality of
life in the elderly individuals scored higher when they spend a greater amount
of time exercising leading to a healthier individual. These are but numbers, data and facts that did not tell us where older people's well-being is concerned are related to real healthy ageing or simply put, ageing happy.
In another research, the role
of a Community Senior Center
(CSC) among older adults is explored.
This research also examines how physical activity and exercises can be
facilitated had implications that can lead to healthier older people and
communities. However, Hickerson et al. (2008) mentioned that health overall is
not merely the presence or absence of disease but a progression of all levels
of vitality – meaning the relationships between health and leisure are
intricately bound. This shows the role of the CSC is not just a place where
the community go for physical activities but a place where social relationships
are born and maintained.
Similar articles like these
have been found and largely researched for the sake of getting to the bottom of
how to support and empower the lives of the elderly in the society to age well,
live healthy, independent and to have a respectful end of life. Hence, do you
think that the government’s part in implementing the Strategy on the physical
well-being of the elderly is enough? Should there be more to that? Or is it us,
the rest of the community that should play another role?
http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/healthy-ageing-strategy
http://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/life-stages/health-older-people/healthy-ageing-strategy-update
http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/health-older-people-strategy-consultation-draft
http://health.govt.nz/our-work/life-stages/health-older-people/healthy-ageing-strategy-update/healthy-ageing-strategy-implementing-strategy
Aoyagi, Y., Park, H.T., Park, S.J.,
& Shephard, R.J. (2010).Habitual physical activity and health-related
quality of life in older adults: interactions between the amount and intensity
of activity (the Nakanojo Study). Qual Life Res 19,
333-338. doi: 10.1007/s11136-010-9588-6
Hickerson, B., Moore ,
A., Oakleaf, L., James, P.J., Swanson, J., & Henderson , K.A. (2008). The role of a senior
center in promoting physical activity for older adults. Journal of Park and Recreation Administration, 26(1), 22-39.
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