Transcript Slide 1

Improving later life Understanding the oldest old
Michelle Mitchell
Charity Director General
Age UK
This is the generation who……
First
World
War
Age of
austerity
Cold
War
Great
Depression
Second
World War
Landgirls
Munitions
NHS
17
PMs
Man on the
moon
Test
tube
babies
60s
Martin
Luther
King
Computers
and
internet
The ‘fourth’ generation
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What was formerly a small group of
exceptional individuals is rapidly becoming a
whole new generation
Fastest growing age group (1.4m today - 5m
by 2050, 85+ UK)
Largest users of health and social care
Most likely to have needs AND face barriers
There is a knowledge ‘shadow’ about this age
group
We should be celebrating longevity
We want to increase understanding and
challenge assumptions, especially the
'demographic time bomb'
www.ageuk.org.uk/oldest
Some stats
• Once you’ve got to 85, you can still expect to live for an average of 7 years
• People in their 80s are happier than young adults (20yrs + and middle age up to
59 years)
• Two thirds of all those 80+ living in the community live independently
• Only about 16% of people over 85 live in residential care
However:
• One in five people 80+ feels depressed much of the time
• Over 80s are much more likely (nearly 6x as likely) to have difficulties managing
money than people in their 60s and 70s
• Over 80 per cent of people aged 80+ in England have a limiting longstanding
illness
• The over 80s are twice as likely to feel lonely much of the time as those in their
60s and 70s
What the book tells us
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People get more diverse the older they get
Chronological age should not be the deciding
factor for health and social care
A lot of things assumed to be inevitable aren’t
and can be treated
Prevention and early treatment key in keeping
the very old from being frail and dependent
The social interaction needs we all have
continue to be important, if not more so, as we
get very old
There is never an age when it’s best to sit and
rest all the time
Life isn’t over once you hit 85 – many enjoy
independence and a good quality of life
Key messages
Learn from the
oldest old
Know that incontinence
is not inevitable
Prevent, identify,
and treat depression
Realise that exercise is
still key for the oldest old
Maintain
vision
about the oldest old
Provide technology for all
Ignore age and look at the
person
Listen to and care
Understand the
importance
Abandon
of social
relationships preconceptions
about the oldest old
Help people live well
with dementia
Manage
sleep
Keep teeth and mouths healthy
Listen to and care about the oldest old
‘I don’t feel 90, just 21
and a wee bit.’
‘I would like to try and
reach 100 – and over it.’
‘My family are all very
good. All very good.’
Photograph taken by Sue Rea as part of Maeve Rea’s research
What would help
• Health and care services tailored to individual needs and based on a more
sophisticated understanding of our ageing population
• The NHS improving access to key services for older people
• Education and training of care professionals adapted to our older and ageing
population
• Care, support and local services focused more on preventing the onset of
health conditions and creating living spaces that promote active ageing
• Approaching care with full regard for older people’s dignity
• Public and private service providers supporting greater intergenerational
contact to help combat ageism