Officials are
calling for measures to cope with the rapid growth of the country's elderly
population.
By the end of 2011, the number of Chinese who were 60 or older had hit
185 million, and that group made up about 13.7 per cent of the population.
Just a year before, the number had been 177.6 million, according to a
report released by the China National Committee on Ageing on March 1.
And the increases are only expected to come more rapidly in the future.
Officials say the number of people who are 60 or older will exceed 200
million by next year and reach 400 million by 2033. According to predictions,
every year from 2014 to 2033 will see the addition of 10 million elderly people
on average.
By the end of 2015, China will be home to 24 million people who are 80
or older. They will make up 11.1 per cent of the population. Meanwhile, more
than 51 million people who are 65 or older will be "empty nesters",
or parents whose children have moved out, according to Minister of Civil
Affairs Li Liguo.
Chen Chuanshu, executive deputy director of the China National
Committee on Ageing, said the aging issues deserve attention, especially since
they are likely to be of great consequence for social and economic development.
He said departments that deal with aging issues should prepare to cope
with the difficulties that can arise from having a large elderly population.
So far, the central government is planning to establish and improve a
health support and service system for the elderly.
It is also looking to extend the country's old-age pension system to
all senior citizens in coming years and further improve the pension benefits.
In January, Tibet became the first region in China to extend old-age
pensions to all senior citizens, according to Xinhua News Agency.
Shanghai has announced it would add 5,000 beds to nursing homes, which
are running short of those accommodations. It also said it would establish 20
day-care centers and 40 meal centres that would provide community care for
about 270,000 elderly people.
On March 1, the city announced plans to provide hospice care for dying
cancer patients.
Each of Shanghai's 18 districts has been called on to establish
community health centers for such patients.
Each of the centers will contain a special ward equipped with 10 beds.
In addition to providing anodynes free of charge, the government also
distributes monthly medical subsidies consisting of 2,000 yuan (US$318) to
advanced cancer patients in community health centers and 1,000 yuan a month to
those who spend their last days at home.
"The faster increase in the elderly population has set up
obstacles to society's sustainable development," said Yu Xinzhong, an
office director of the Shanghai No 3 Social Welfare Home, a public nursing home
in the city.
"It's highly important for the government in the near future to
map out a long-term plan to cope with the difficulties caused by having a
larger elderly population."
The city's population department predicts that about one-third of
Shanghai residents will be older than 60 by 2020.
Wang Hongyi
China Daily
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