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Most Older Australians Aren’t In Aged Care. Policy Blind Spots Mean They Live In Communities That Aren’t Age-friendly

In response to the horror stories of abuse and neglect from the Royal Commission into Aged Care, the new federal Labor government has made legislative changes. Prior to this, Australia’s most recent aged-care reforms were enacted a decade ago. The focus, however, is still largely on residential care homes, so what about older Australians in the broader community?

More older Australians are still living in their own homes. How do our policies and cities support them? We have published an analysis comparing 85 policy documents across all three levels of Australian governments against World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on age-friendly cities.



We found these policies reflect outdated views of old age. They neglect many important aspects that contribute to happy and fulfilling lives in older age.

The policy focus is overwhelmingly on care and support services. There are decreasing levels of attention to housing, transport, walkability and, least of all, cultural diversity.

WHO guidance on making age-friendly cities​

The WHO first published its Global Age-Friendly Cities: A Guide in 2007 to support the active ageing policy framework it proposed back in 2002. Described as “the centrepiece of WHO’s age-friendly cities approach”, the guide became a major point-of-reference for age-friendly policymaking around the world.

In 2010, the WHO launched the Global Network of Age-Friendly Cities and Communities. The network aims to help governments and other organisations build age-friendly cities through evidence-based guidance and knowledge exchanges. Australia’s members include two states, 34 local councils and one regional organisation.

Our research, however, found little to no difference between Australian members and non-members in making direct policy references to these guides. For example, more of South Australia’s (a non-member) policy documents referred to the guidelines than Western Australia’s (a member), as the table below shows.

Screen Shot 2022-11-01 at 11.40.03.png
Source: Author provided

There were also discrepancies between the tiers of government. State and territory governments were more likely to take on such guidance than federal and local governments. Yet local governments are the intended audience of the framework and the guide.

Previous research in Canada blamed this on “the minimal state powers of municipal governments”. In Australia, too, our federated system has left local councils with limited authority and resources.



An outdated view of old age​

In analysing the 85 policy documents, we adopted a “traffic light” system to highlight whether they acknowledged ageing-related challenges and proposed corresponding actions.

Screen Shot 2022-11-01 at 11.41.19.png
Our analysis focused on five policy areas:

  1. care and support services
  2. cultural diversity
  3. housing
  4. transport
  5. walkability.
These areas broadly align with the WHO’s age-friendly domains.

The skewed policy focus is on care and support services. This reflects decades of aged-care reforms in Australia and their take-up at all levels of government. It also potentially reveals a stereotypical view of old age as being a time of frailty, decline and disengagement.

In contrast, many Australian and international movements advocate positive ageing. Their approach recognises the important contributions people make in later life.



Our analysis also reveals a failure to recognise how diverse circumstances impact the ageing processes. The result is a neglect of the broader spectrum of older Australians’ support needs.

This was most obvious in the failure of policies to recognise diverse cultural needs. There is almost a complete blindness to their impacts on ageing and other social determinants of health.

A mismatch between resources and services​

In Australia’s three-tiered government system, each level has its own authority and resourcing ability. Previous Australian research shows local governments have limited ability to raise the resources they need to design and implement policies and programs for their ageing residents as the WHO guidance intended.

Our analysis shows a reliance on national programs instead. These may not be as nuanced in responding to local needs and conditions.

In related work, our fine-level spatial analysis also highlights a mismatch between the growth of ageing populations across Australia and where aged care services are being offered. This is due largely to inequitable eligibility criteria. These effectively favour home owners living in standalone suburban houses over others such as renters.



The latest proposal to revamp a residential aged-care sector that is no longer fit-for-purpose must be applauded. Policy should aim to provide these residents with all the attention and dignity they deserve. But as the population ages, there’s an ever greater need to provide support across all the domains that enable older people to live healthy, fulfilling lives.

People want age-friendly communities​

We must look more broadly, to the many more older Australians who live in the community. It’s an option our governments have long encouraged. And it’s what most people prefer for themselves.

Local authorities would know local residents and their needs most intimately. But our analyses show they are hamstrung in supporting the needs of older people in the community.



Continued reform must aim to ensure local councils have the powers and resources required to serve these needs. This will go some way towards responding better to Australians’ changing needs. Importantly, it will also help to reframe the dialogue of ageing away from frailty and debilitation.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Edgar LiuSenior Research Fellow, Healthy Urban Environments (HUE) Collaboratory / City Futures Research Centre at UNSW Sydney, Bruce Judd Professor and Director, Australian School of Architecture and Design at UNSW Sydney, Mariana T Atkins Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Social Impact at The University of Western Australia
 
It's just a mumbo jumbo collection of words, probably costing millions, that doesn't do or propose anything concrete. It's so people can pat themselves on the back saying how good and proactive they are without actually doing anything. :(
 
The Graduation I attended was about 6 years ago, at UNSW.
I was there for my son's graduation for his Master's of Biomedical Engineering.
When the title of the "rat" PhD student was announced, the response from the audience was audible.
Even to this day, I still wonder what the student's parameters were for her PhD.
What were her reasons for her study?
What benefits to society have been reached through her study?
Did she use laboratory-raised rats,
or wild rats?
What bearing did her source of rats have on her results?
Oh, so many unanswered questions.
I wish I'd taken notice of her name,
I'd love to read her thesis.
 
The Graduation I attended was about 6 years ago, at UNSW.
I was there for my son's graduation for his Master's of Biomedical Engineering.
When the title of the "rat" PhD student was announced, the response from the audience was audible.
Even to this day, I still wonder what the student's parameters were for her PhD.
What were her reasons for her study?
What benefits to society have been reached through her study?
Did she use laboratory-raised rats,
or wild rats?
What bearing did her source of rats have on her results?
Oh, so many unanswered questions.
I wish I'd taken notice of her name,
I'd love to read her thesis.
I bet your son has a great job now too.
 
Most Older Australians Aren’t In Aged Care. Policy Blind Spots Mean They Live In Communities That Aren’t Age-friendly

In response to the horror stories of abuse and neglect from the Royal Commission into Aged Care, the new federal Labor government has made legislative changes. Prior to this, Australia’s most recent aged-care reforms were enacted a decade ago. The focus, however, is still largely on residential care homes, so what about older Australians in the broader community?

More older Australians are still living in their own homes. How do our policies and cities support them? We have published an analysis comparing 85 policy documents across all three levels of Australian governments against World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on age-friendly cities.



We found these policies reflect outdated views of old age. They neglect many important aspects that contribute to happy and fulfilling lives in older age.

The policy focus is overwhelmingly on care and support services. There are decreasing levels of attention to housing, transport, walkability and, least of all, cultural diversity.

WHO guidance on making age-friendly cities​

The WHO first published its Global Age-Friendly Cities: A Guide in 2007 to support the active ageing policy framework it proposed back in 2002. Described as “the centrepiece of WHO’s age-friendly cities approach”, the guide became a major point-of-reference for age-friendly policymaking around the world.

In 2010, the WHO launched the Global Network of Age-Friendly Cities and Communities. The network aims to help governments and other organisations build age-friendly cities through evidence-based guidance and knowledge exchanges. Australia’s members include two states, 34 local councils and one regional organisation.

Our research, however, found little to no difference between Australian members and non-members in making direct policy references to these guides. For example, more of South Australia’s (a non-member) policy documents referred to the guidelines than Western Australia’s (a member), as the table below shows.

View attachment 8167
Source: Author provided

There were also discrepancies between the tiers of government. State and territory governments were more likely to take on such guidance than federal and local governments. Yet local governments are the intended audience of the framework and the guide.

Previous research in Canada blamed this on “the minimal state powers of municipal governments”. In Australia, too, our federated system has left local councils with limited authority and resources.



An outdated view of old age​

In analysing the 85 policy documents, we adopted a “traffic light” system to highlight whether they acknowledged ageing-related challenges and proposed corresponding actions.

Our analysis focused on five policy areas:

  1. care and support services
  2. cultural diversity
  3. housing
  4. transport
  5. walkability.
These areas broadly align with the WHO’s age-friendly domains.

The skewed policy focus is on care and support services. This reflects decades of aged-care reforms in Australia and their take-up at all levels of government. It also potentially reveals a stereotypical view of old age as being a time of frailty, decline and disengagement.

In contrast, many Australian and international movements advocate positive ageing. Their approach recognises the important contributions people make in later life.



Our analysis also reveals a failure to recognise how diverse circumstances impact the ageing processes. The result is a neglect of the broader spectrum of older Australians’ support needs.

This was most obvious in the failure of policies to recognise diverse cultural needs. There is almost a complete blindness to their impacts on ageing and other social determinants of health.

A mismatch between resources and services​

In Australia’s three-tiered government system, each level has its own authority and resourcing ability. Previous Australian research shows local governments have limited ability to raise the resources they need to design and implement policies and programs for their ageing residents as the WHO guidance intended.

Our analysis shows a reliance on national programs instead. These may not be as nuanced in responding to local needs and conditions.

In related work, our fine-level spatial analysis also highlights a mismatch between the growth of ageing populations across Australia and where aged care services are being offered. This is due largely to inequitable eligibility criteria. These effectively favour home owners living in standalone suburban houses over others such as renters.



The latest proposal to revamp a residential aged-care sector that is no longer fit-for-purpose must be applauded. Policy should aim to provide these residents with all the attention and dignity they deserve. But as the population ages, there’s an ever greater need to provide support across all the domains that enable older people to live healthy, fulfilling lives.

People want age-friendly communities​

We must look more broadly, to the many more older Australians who live in the community. It’s an option our governments have long encouraged. And it’s what most people prefer for themselves.

Local authorities would know local residents and their needs most intimately. But our analyses show they are hamstrung in supporting the needs of older people in the community.



Continued reform must aim to ensure local councils have the powers and resources required to serve these needs. This will go some way towards responding better to Australians’ changing needs. Importantly, it will also help to reframe the dialogue of ageing away from frailty and debilitation.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Edgar LiuSenior Research Fellow, Healthy Urban Environments (HUE) Collaboratory / City Futures Research Centre at UNSW Sydney, Bruce Judd Professor and Director, Australian School of Architecture and Design at UNSW Sydney, Mariana T Atkins Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Social Impact at The University of Western Australia
Currently we live in a rural community. Unfortunately we have come across the usual garage that goes on in these communities. The click seems to run the place and newcomers can be left out in the cold. Also services are pretty thin on the ground. This year we will return to the city and family and long term friends who support us. Also there is much more to do there for us. I believe loneliness is the prime driver of people going into retirement villages/aged care facilities but it isn't necessarily the answer to everyones issues
 
The Graduation I attended was about 6 years ago, at UNSW.
I was there for my son's graduation for his Master's of Biomedical Engineering.
When the title of the "rat" PhD student was announced, the response from the audience was audible.
Even to this day, I still wonder what the student's parameters were for her PhD.
What were her reasons for her study?
What benefits have
Did she use laboratory-raised rats,
or wild rats?
What bearing did her source of rats have on her results?
Oh, so many unanswered questions.
I wish I'd taken notice of her name, I'd love to read her thesis.
I bet your son has a great job now too.
My dear son is still connected with UNSW, he is in the final stages of his PhD with the Department of Health, setting up systems to detect fraud within Medicare, in a specific area which I am not at liberty to declare.
 
Currently we live in a rural community. Unfortunately we have come across the usual garage that goes on in these communities. The click seems to run the place and newcomers can be left out in the cold. Also services are pretty thin on the ground. This year we will return to the city and family and long term friends who support us. Also there is much more to do there for us. I believe loneliness is the prime driver of people going into retirement villages/aged care facilities but it isn't necessarily the answer to everyones issues
I moved into a retirement village mainly because I'm lazy! I knew I should downsize as being by myself I certainly didn't need a 5 bedroom, 3 bathroom place anymore. I thought long and hard about what I should do, I could downsize somewhere in the village I currently was living, but then what, move again when things got too hard? I decided to miss out on at least one move and go straight to a retirement place in a nearby village. It had nothing to do with loneliness, more practicality. I don't currently use the facilities the village supply but they are there for if and when I'm ready. :)
 
Currently we live in a rural community. Unfortunately we have come across the usual garage that goes on in these communities. The click seems to run the place and newcomers can be left out in the cold. Also services are pretty thin on the ground. This year we will return to the city and family and long term friends who support us. Also there is much more to do there for us. I believe loneliness is the prime driver of people going into retirement villages/aged care facilities but it isn't necessarily the answer to everyones issues
I can't see myself going into an aged care home, even though my granddaughter works in one. I have a loving ex-son-in-law. who cares for me & my granddaughter lives next door. So as long as I can I will stay in my rented house. In fact today my wonderful granddaughter & I will be jumping out of a perfectly good plane because I mentioned it was something I had always wanted to do & she remembered & bought me the experience for my 85th birthday in October. This is the first day we have been able to try because of weather restrictions on the other days.
 
I can't see myself going into an aged care home, even though my granddaughter works in one. I have a loving ex-son-in-law. who cares for me & my granddaughter lives next door. So as long as I can I will stay in my rented house. In fact today my wonderful granddaughter & I will be jumping out of a perfectly good plane because I mentioned it was something I had always wanted to do & she remembered & bought me the experience for my 85th birthday in October. This is the first day we have been able to try because of weather restrictions on the other days.
May your long-awaited experience be a wonderful one, may the joy of the wind on your face be exhilarating.
(I was going to say uplifting, but no, you need to come back to Earth!)
 
Currently we live in a rural community. Unfortunately we have come across the usual garage that goes on in these communities. The click seems to run the place and newcomers can be left out in the cold. Also services are pretty thin on the ground. This year we will return to the city and family and long term friends who support us. Also there is much more to do there for us. I believe loneliness is the prime driver of people going into retirement villages/aged care facilities but it isn't necessarily the answer to everyones issues
Aww @Lizzie1149 I'm so sorry to hear about your experience. It's true that, especially, older newcomers find it difficult to 'break' through invisible barriers that surround groups. As smaller towns usually do not provide a wide range of activities, you'll also find that some people who had been born there, find themselves on the 'outside' as they do not share the interests of the majority!

In our town (I call it a village as it is so small) social media started making a difference - one recent arrival expressed her need for company on the local FB page and quickly gathered a number of other 'outsiders' with whom to socialise. This venture is still in its infant shoes so I'm not sure whether it will succeed, but I like the fact that we're creating an alternative space where we do not need to play power games.

A bigger problem for me is that it seems impossible for us (my partner and I) to find likeminded men to engage with. While I have met great women (single and in relationships), the men all seem not to be interested in making new friends and would rather stay at home and do... whatever it is that they do there? And yes, I'm fully aware of TOMNET but in our village they're one of the tightknit groups that aren't very inviting.

So, to the males on this group: Do you have any suggestions on how we can get the men to become more social?
 
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Currently we live in a rural community. Unfortunately we have come across the usual garage that goes on in these communities. The click seems to run the place and newcomers can be left out in the cold. Also services are pretty thin on the ground. This year we will return to the city and family and long term friends who support us. Also there is much more to do there for us. I believe loneliness is the prime driver of people going into retirement villages/aged care facilities but it isn't necessarily the answer to everyones issues

My husband and I built a new home in a rural community and I have to admit even though some considerations to our age and the fact that we would not get any younger was built into the design of the home what we did not consider was the total lack of local services, example closest doctors surgery or hospital (which is really only a nursing station) is 30k away, same distance for light shopping, there is no local transport available, you drive or you stay at home. The shortsightedness on our part was caused by the difference in Land prices between the rural town we were living in and the one we moved too. We put the savings on the price of the land into the House to give us everything that we wanted, the universe has a way of showing you that you have made an error in your judgement and quite honestly we are paying the price now, given the choice again we would not have built here at all. The local shire council will not spend the money on our community as it does not think we are even important enough for things such as street lighting, everyone here pays very little in Rates so we do not contribute enough to give us any say in the Local shires decisions, suprisingly according to the last census results the % of the population aged over 60 in this area is more than 50%, maybe one day we will have an ambulance service here that can get to us within the 20 minutes deemed critical for a suspected heart attack, instead of over 1 hour, unfortunately for us the only way out of here is with a lotto win, we live in hope!!
 
Most Older Australians Aren’t In Aged Care. Policy Blind Spots Mean They Live In Communities That Aren’t Age-friendly

In response to the horror stories of abuse and neglect from the Royal Commission into Aged Care, the new federal Labor government has made legislative changes. Prior to this, Australia’s most recent aged-care reforms were enacted a decade ago. The focus, however, is still largely on residential care homes, so what about older Australians in the broader community?

More older Australians are still living in their own homes. How do our policies and cities support them? We have published an analysis comparing 85 policy documents across all three levels of Australian governments against World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on age-friendly cities.



We found these policies reflect outdated views of old age. They neglect many important aspects that contribute to happy and fulfilling lives in older age.

The policy focus is overwhelmingly on care and support services. There are decreasing levels of attention to housing, transport, walkability and, least of all, cultural diversity.

WHO guidance on making age-friendly cities​

The WHO first published its Global Age-Friendly Cities: A Guide in 2007 to support the active ageing policy framework it proposed back in 2002. Described as “the centrepiece of WHO’s age-friendly cities approach”, the guide became a major point-of-reference for age-friendly policymaking around the world.

In 2010, the WHO launched the Global Network of Age-Friendly Cities and Communities. The network aims to help governments and other organisations build age-friendly cities through evidence-based guidance and knowledge exchanges. Australia’s members include two states, 34 local councils and one regional organisation.

Our research, however, found little to no difference between Australian members and non-members in making direct policy references to these guides. For example, more of South Australia’s (a non-member) policy documents referred to the guidelines than Western Australia’s (a member), as the table below shows.

View attachment 8167
Source: Author provided

There were also discrepancies between the tiers of government. State and territory governments were more likely to take on such guidance than federal and local governments. Yet local governments are the intended audience of the framework and the guide.

Previous research in Canada blamed this on “the minimal state powers of municipal governments”. In Australia, too, our federated system has left local councils with limited authority and resources.



An outdated view of old age​

In analysing the 85 policy documents, we adopted a “traffic light” system to highlight whether they acknowledged ageing-related challenges and proposed corresponding actions.

Our analysis focused on five policy areas:

  1. care and support services
  2. cultural diversity
  3. housing
  4. transport
  5. walkability.
These areas broadly align with the WHO’s age-friendly domains.

The skewed policy focus is on care and support services. This reflects decades of aged-care reforms in Australia and their take-up at all levels of government. It also potentially reveals a stereotypical view of old age as being a time of frailty, decline and disengagement.

In contrast, many Australian and international movements advocate positive ageing. Their approach recognises the important contributions people make in later life.



Our analysis also reveals a failure to recognise how diverse circumstances impact the ageing processes. The result is a neglect of the broader spectrum of older Australians’ support needs.

This was most obvious in the failure of policies to recognise diverse cultural needs. There is almost a complete blindness to their impacts on ageing and other social determinants of health.

A mismatch between resources and services​

In Australia’s three-tiered government system, each level has its own authority and resourcing ability. Previous Australian research shows local governments have limited ability to raise the resources they need to design and implement policies and programs for their ageing residents as the WHO guidance intended.

Our analysis shows a reliance on national programs instead. These may not be as nuanced in responding to local needs and conditions.

In related work, our fine-level spatial analysis also highlights a mismatch between the growth of ageing populations across Australia and where aged care services are being offered. This is due largely to inequitable eligibility criteria. These effectively favour home owners living in standalone suburban houses over others such as renters.



The latest proposal to revamp a residential aged-care sector that is no longer fit-for-purpose must be applauded. Policy should aim to provide these residents with all the attention and dignity they deserve. But as the population ages, there’s an ever greater need to provide support across all the domains that enable older people to live healthy, fulfilling lives.

People want age-friendly communities​

We must look more broadly, to the many more older Australians who live in the community. It’s an option our governments have long encouraged. And it’s what most people prefer for themselves.

Local authorities would know local residents and their needs most intimately. But our analyses show they are hamstrung in supporting the needs of older people in the community.



Continued reform must aim to ensure local councils have the powers and resources required to serve these needs. This will go some way towards responding better to Australians’ changing needs. Importantly, it will also help to reframe the dialogue of ageing away from frailty and debilitation.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Edgar LiuSenior Research Fellow, Healthy Urban Environments (HUE) Collaboratory / City Futures Research Centre at UNSW Sydney, Bruce Judd Professor and Director, Australian School of Architecture and Design at UNSW Sydney, Mariana T Atkins Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Social Impact at The University of Western Australia
Why would you come to the Gold Coast, overpriced cess pit, Bus system is laughable, Rentals grossly overpriced, Dumps on market that would not be suitable to animals. Roads are congested and potholes.
Beaches are dangerous with discarded needles, drunk homeless people in so called family friendly precincts . Homes for aged Australians non existing.
 
The royal commission into aged care seems to have been a great waste of taxpayers money, I have yet to hear of or see any changes that will make a positive change to the care of residents living in aged care facilities. Unless there is a huge increase in required staff to patient ratios there will be no improvement in the care given, staff don’t have the time to spend giving anything but the most basic, rushed, required care that residents need. Putting a registered nurse into all facilities won’t improve care levels, it might reduce them as less hands on staff may be employed due to the cost of wages for a registered nurse. Even the so called “not for profit” facilities care more about their annual profit margin than providing anything above the most basic care, nutrition, lifestyle than they have to, to meet the government criteria to keep their funding. I live in a reasonably large town in a country area and have been told by friends working in aged care that local facilities have trouble getting agency staff now, as they don’t want to travel out of the major city areas to work anymore. This means these facilities are always working short staffed and the residents care levels have deteriorated even further than they were. Where is the government now? I guarantee they aren’t even aware of what is happening in aged care outside the city areas and I don’t believe they care enough to find out. I doubt they even care too much if any of the royal commissions recommendations are put into place.
 

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