
With India's health standards and services being a big concern for the state. Population ageing is kept in darkness so far.Population ageing has emerged as the grand challenge of this century: for policymakers, care providers and society as a whole.The proportion of the elderly in the total population had increased from 5.63 per cent in 1961 to 6.58 per cent in 1991 and to 7.5 per cent in 2001. India has thus joined the rank of “Greying nations” with over seven per cent of its population in the 60-plus years segment Currently, there could be around 100 million ‘senior citizens' in India.
PROBLEMS
It could be generalized that elderly people in India suffer a double-whammy effect; the combined burden of both communicable (usually infectious) and non-communicable (usually chronic and lifestyle related) diseases. This is compounded by an impairment of special sensory functions like vision and hearing that decline with advancing age. Thus, elders have a considerable burden of both infectious diseases like tuberculosis and chronic illnesses such as diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, and cancer.Notably, the majority prefer to use private health-care services, even though they are more expensive, service quality being an important reason for such a preference.While aging is not synonymous with disability, a large proportion of the Indian aged population is disabled, the severity of disablement increasing day by day.
ISSUES IN MODERN INDIAN SOCIETY
Traditionally, the joint family in India took care of its elderly. These traditional care arrangements have been lost in the context of rapid urbanisation and an exodus of people from rural to urban areas and from urban areas to foreign countries. In the absence of such community support in the form of kinsmen or the extended family, and an inability to continue to earn their living, the elderly are often rendered destitute, if not financially, from a pragmatic perspective. While these problems plague most traditional societies that are in transition, their rapidly enlarging scope and scale, demand and necessitate an urgent response from our policy makers.
The Government India, supported actively by civil society, unveiled its National Policy on Older Persons (NPOP) over 50 years after Independence. A comprehensive document covering every aspect of the elder's life, ambitious, with a clear cut action plan, it proposed a role for the State in the elder care: health, shelter, financial security and protection against abuse. It recognised the need for affirmative action favouring the elderly, viewing them as national resources, creating opportunities for their development. Training, empowerment and partnership with elderly were seen as important in providing equality and dignity to all groups of elderly. Unfortunately, a decade later, the NPOP awaits complete implementation in all States and Union Territories of India, much of its promise remaining unfulfilled, prompting the Government of India to seek its revision to suit contemporary needs.
Discussions among civil society groups and concerned senior citizens in the run up to a re-organised NPOP, reveal many consensus points for the future organisation of elder health care. There is little doubt that the care of the elder must remain vested within the family unit and based within the community the elder resides in. Incentives for families that care for their elders are necessary; as are the development of community health-care resources; doctors, nurses and paramedics specialised in elder health care; and rehabilitation facilities for those with disability. The importance of Government and civil society partnerships needs to be underscored here; as is regulation of such elder health-care services for quality and cost. While the focus is often on in-patient (hospitalisation) care, there is a clear need to develop other models relevant to the elder: out-patient care, day care, palliative care, rehabilitation care, respite care and step down care. Developing community level health-care worker pools that will both screen the elderly for risk factors, disease and disability; and provide simple home based interventions is necessary; as is tiered access for the elderly to a range of professionals: from generalist to specialist doctors. Most importantly, perhaps, those working in this area feel the need for unitary, sustainable and replicable models of screening and assessment: health checks that would address apart from routine risk factors like hypertension and diabetes, areas of potential disability: vision, hearing, falls, bone and joint, respiratory and cardiac disability etc.
PRESENT SCENARIO & CONCERNS
The majority of Indian elders are in potentially vulnerable situations without adequate food, clothing, or shelter.Providing health care that givesAvailability, Affordability, Accessibility, Acceptability and Accountability to such a large vulnerable group, is a challenge that has to be confronted. Insurance cover that is elder-sensitive is virtually non-existent; insurance premiums increase in an unsustainable manner with age and there is rampant age-discrimination in the health insurance sector.Further, pre-existing illnesses are usually not covered, making insurance policies unviable for the elder. Indeed, senior citizens point out that they pay far more for health insurance than their utilisation justifies; and that elders end up subsidising the care of younger citizens, who form the bulk of health insurance consumers.
The elder citizen is a national treasure; one who has contributed to both national growth and familial development. As they approach the autumn of their lives, they experience diminishing ability to generate income, increasing vulnerability to illness and disability, and increasing dependency on their families and communities. Rather than view this dependence as a burden to be endured, we must as a society embrace it whole-heartedly, as a pay back opportunity; to thank senior citizens for their many unconditional contributions. The organisation and delivery of elder health care must therefore be approached with enthusiasm, altruism and generosity. Mature health policy for the elder combined with a generous dose of pragmatism in organising, delivering and funding health care services is the need of the hour.We should be reminded about the challenge of population ageing; the looming burden of elder disability; and the need for a comprehensive and pragmatic National Policy for Older Persons.
hey junaid
ReplyDeleteboss, just asking for a national policy wont work...lead by suggesting smthing like what policy should include .... like
1. increasing the age of retirement, for increasing the limit of self independence...(like who r we to tell anyone that u can not work now man if he wishes to)
2. making pensions tax free or, giving medical cover or, free health check up facility etc.
3. medical facilities are a real mess, need a makeover, and that has brought out ..
4. and value of parents, grand parents, what living in a joint family is worth for - -morally, it should be promoted .
@Robota: Well,its through policies only, the government in India delivers public services, their isn't any other way, i guess!
ReplyDelete1.Well when you work for a firm or say govt its them (the Authority)which decides whether we are fit for the Job or not.Same Authority has the power to decides the age of retirement and all.This is how it works!!If a man wishes to work, he can work on his own,being self employed. But those who'll pay him,will surely have the authority to hire him or not.
2.Well pensions are in govt sector,as a form of social security. The pro and cons of a job profile is known to person before he/she joins a particular sector. A person is already given enough fringe benefits during his entire career to secure his future. The article in the blog is about the 'Aged people' and their social scenario.
PS: Not all of the Aged have a pension,or a cover. Many really don't have anything at all,its about them
3.About the Health sector i agree we need a reform but for a population of 1.21 billion and the way the doctoral ethics are going now a days, we need a reform at the educational level and societal level to do our jobs in the right spirit,where its meant to "serve others", it should be in the right spirit.
PS:Educating people is the way out.
4.We really can't change mind set in a day or so.It takes decades, but the fear is "Are we changing in the right direction"? I believe the moral and ethical lessons starts very much from the early psycho-developmental phase, that is from the family,parents,and the school.
PS: Its how well you parents give the "Toilet Training"