WHO Launches Bid to
Boost Elderly Health Care
The World Health Organization launched
an initiative on Monday to improve medical services for the elderly
in a bid to tackle the growing public health implications of a
rapidly aging global population.
The number of people aged 60 and
above is expected to double to 1.2 billion by 2025, and reach
two billion by 2050, threatening a sharp increase in chronic diseases,
the WHO said.
The initiative, launched by the
WHO at an aging conference in Singapore, centers on retraining
primary healthcare workers to focus more on elderly care, and
to improve facilities and ensure greater access to healthcare
centers.
"Being the first point of contact,
primary healthcare workers, if properly trained, are able to prevent
many other disastrous health problems through early detection,
said Alexandre Kalache, chief of the Aging and Life Course Program
(ALC) at the WHO.
"An overweight man can easily come
down with diabetes if there is no active prevention on his overweight
problem. From there, other illnesses like blindnesss and kidney
failure can easily follow," he said.
The project was announced during
the seventh global conference of the International Federation
on Aging. A clinic in the wealthy city state has been selected
as the first test site for the WHO initiative.
"We hope countries will take up
the guidelines we (WHO) have established. At the end of the day,
this initiative can also be seen as a cost-saving measure to defray
the rising healthcare cost that will otherwise be a long-term
burden," said Kalache.
Reference
Source 89
September 7, 2004
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