Uncategorized June 2, 2014

AGE FRIENDLY CITIES

 

Consumer Newsletter – June 2014

By Elyse Umlauf-Garneau

www.sres.org

 



 

 

Age-friendly Cities

By Elyse Umlauf-Garneau

By 2030, one out of every five people in the U.S. will be age 65 plus, says AARP.

How well those seniors will live depends greatly on the environment both inside their houses and outside. By incorporating universal design principles, people can make their houses more age-friendly. But seniors’ quality of life can be diminished if the larger community doesn’t provide an environment and services conducive to aging in place.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Age-Friendly Cities Initiative has established comprehensive guidelines to help cities assess their age friendliness and make certain that they’re providing an environment where seniors can live a full, engaging, and high-quality life.

WHO’s program addresses eight categories:

  • Housing
  • Outdoor Spaces and Buildings
  • Transportation
  • Community and Health Services
  • Civic Participation and Employment

 

 

 

  • Communication and Information
  • Social Participation
  • Respect or Social Inclusion

Cities around the globe, including, Udine, Italy, Ponce, Puerto Rico, and Himeji, Japan have joined the WHO network and have adopted strategies to eliminate barriers to aging in place.

Various efforts to make cities and town age friendly are happening across the United States too.  Among them are Brookline (www.brooklinema.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1554&Itemid=1778), Mass., Larimer County (www.foalarimer.org/age-friendly-communities/partnerships http://foalarimer.org), Colo., and Portland (http://agefriendlyportland.org/), Oregon.

Some efforts are broadly supported and funded and managed by government entities. Others start with small grassroots community groups or academic institutions.

New York City leads the way

New York City, for one, has developed a comprehensive program that started in 2007 when it became the first U.S. city to join WHO’s network. Age-friendly New York City (NYAM) is a collaboration (http://www.nyam.org/agefriendlynyc/) among the Office of the Mayor, the New York City Council, and The New York Academy of Medicine.

NYAM’s first step was to go into neighborhoods with a high concentration of seniors and just talk to residents and capture their views about what they liked, what they needed and in what ways the neighborhoods were falling short.

Based on those interviews and focus groups, NYAM developed its plan to make the city more age friendly. “This process was extremely important and gave us a baseline assessment,” comments Caitlyn Smith, NYAM’s Strategic Assistance Coordinator, Age-friendly NYC.  “It continues to inform our work today.”

Some of NYAM’s initiatives are citywide. Others are tailored to specific needs of a neighborhood in the city’s designated five Aging Improvement Districts in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Manhattan. “Lots of projects start in aging improvement districts and then are expanded into citywide programs,” says Smith.

In addition, some successes are quantifiable and other efforts are measured anecdotally.

Danger, convenience, recreation

Across the city, for instance, the Department of Transportation (DOT) has been redesigning the most dangerous intersections and crosswalks for seniors in an effort to reduce injuries and fatalities.

The strategy started in five neighborhoods. The city found that retiming crosswalks and adding islands, for example, reduced injuries between 9% and 60%, depending on the intersection. Once DOT saw how successful such redesigns could be, it rolled out a citywide plan.

Smith points to another program, Senior Splash, which reserves a certain number of hours at public swimming pool time exclusively for seniors’ use. “One woman likes going for her arthritis because it’s a tool for soothing her pain,” comments Smith. “She also like the community aspect of the program because it gets her out and socializing and she’s made friends at the pool.”

And in Bedford-Stuyvesant, NYAM is working with a neighborhood improvement group, to go door to door to ask businesses to make their environments more senior friendly.

The recommended modifications are often small and no or low cost. For instance, a retailer could stock the most commonly purchased items on low, easy-to-access shelves. And putting in chairs where seniors can sit and take a break or making wider aisles that are easy to maneuver are other tactics that cost little but make a difference to senior clientele.

 

Staying ahead of the curve

New York City’s program is an example of one done on a grand scale. But every city and town can benefit by making age-friendly upgrades, believes Smith.

Just as it is with universal design for homes, everyone, not just seniors, benefits from age-friendly changes. For example, more benches scattered around public parks help mothers with small children and joggers who need a rest. Longer lights at crosswalks, for example, assist others – a teen on crutches who is recovering from a sports injury or a businessperson using a wheelchair – to safely cross intersections too.

“The population of the world is aging at an unprecedented rate this is something that we really need to be thinking about. Before, if you addressed age-friendly initiatives, you were a leader. At this point, those cities that aren’t thinking about age-friendly practices are behind the curve,” says Smith.

 

Additional resources

If you’re interested in making your hometown more age friendly, you don’t need to start from scratch, nor do you need to create a comprehensive plan that addresses all eight WHO categories.

Some towns choose the top two categories that are important to their communities and do projects that work for their budgets and residents.

Success doesn’t necessarily require government leadership. Often academic, health, and community groups collaborate to launch age-friendly city initiatives.

There are vast resources, networks and guides to help you get a plan off the ground.

They include:

<>·www.aarp.org/livable-communities/network-age-friendly-communities/info-2014/an-introduction.html 
<>··www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health-july-dec13-aging_09-04/) –Watch a segment about New York City’s age-friendly upgrades. 
<>·http://www.who.int/ageing/age_friendly_cities_network/en/) – Find complete information about WHO’s age-friendly initiatives and download its guide, “Global age-friendly cities: a guide,” at http://www.who.int/ageing/age_friendly_cities_guide/en/. 

 

 



 

 

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