Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

November 27, 2024

Report highlights urgent need for age-appropriate housing solutions

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
× close
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

A from the government-appointed Older People's Housing Taskforce has shed light on the critical shortage of suitable housing options for senior citizens.

Chaired by Professor Julienne Meyer CBE, Professor Emerita of Nursing: Care for Older People at City St George's, University of London, and involving Professor Les Mayhew, Professor of Statistics at Bayes Business School, the Taskforce and accompanying report are calling for to meet the needs of the aging population, and they have set out a number of core recommendations.

This includes the establishment of an "Office for an Aging Population" to help address the crisis in 's and assist the government in developing a long-term strategy to address the rapidly changing needs of our society.

The report, "", provides an in-depth analysis of the challenges faced by older people in accessing housing that supports their independence, well-being and community engagement.

With the number of people aged 65-79 predicted to increase by nearly 20% by 2040 to 11.6m and those aged 80 by 42% to 5.3m, the findings highlight the pressing need to rethink housing strategies and priorities.

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters — to customize your preferences!

Key findings

The report emphasizes the importance of increasing the volume, quality and choice of age-friendly, dementia-inclusive, faith and culture-sensitive later homes and neighborhoods for later living.

Professor Meyer CBE, Professor Emerita of Nursing: Care for Older People, City St George's University of London and Chair of the Older People's Taskforce (2023–2024), said,

"I am delighted the new government has decided to publish this report, as I believe it could help solve the general housing crisis in England today. Having championed older people issues for nearly forty years, my worry is that we will all continue to bury our heads in the sand and marginalize the aging population.

"We need to be brave and give it our urgent attention. This is why we are calling for the establishment of the 'Office for an Aging Population' to not only address the crisis in older people's housing, but also, to encourage government to develop a long-term strategy to address the rapidly changing needs of our society.

"The report is a call to action for all stakeholders to create solutions that address these urgent needs. We all need to 'think housing,' 'address aging,' 'promote well-being' and 'create inclusive communities.'"

Professor Mayhew added, "The Taskforce has outlined nine key recommendations and one overarching recommendation to change the dial on older people's housing. However, they are a coherent package and should be implemented as a package. The government should adopt all ten recommendations and show strong leadership from the front and a real commitment to change.

"There are doubts about the government's ability to deliver the 300,000 new homes a year it has promised but it should prioritize and incentivize older people's housing. Policymakers at a local and national level also need to ensure that those homes are in age-friendly neighborhoods with good public transport routes, street furniture and access to services such as GPs."

Core recommendations

  1. Standardize definitions of Older People's Housing/Later Living Homes (OPH/LLH)
  2. Incentivize a wide range of OPH/LLH options
  3. Ensure more housing is designed for later life
  4. Create age-friendly, dementia-inclusive, faith and culture sensitive communities and neighborhoods
  5. Expand OPH/LLH at scale and ensure it is affordable to live in, and viable to finance, build and operate
  6. Strengthen planning policies
  7. Establish a national information platform and local hubs
  8. Build consumer confidence
  9. Enhance innovation, research and professional development
  10. Overarching recommendation—Create collective leadership to drive change

More information: Our Future Homes: Housing that promotes well-being and community for an aging population.

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
trusted source
proofread

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.