| Literature DB >> 33096773 |
Melanie Davern1,2, Rachel Winterton3, Kathleen Brasher4, Geoff Woolcock5.
Abstract
The Age-Friendly Cities and Communities Guide was released by the World Health Organization over a decade ago with the aim of creating environments that support healthy ageing. The comprehensive framework includes the domains of outdoor spaces and buildings, transportation, housing, social participation, respect and inclusion, civic participation and employment, communication and information, and community and health services. A major critique of the age-friendly community movement has argued for a more clearly defined scope of actions, the need to measure or quantify results and increase the connections to policy and funding levers. This paper provides a quantifiable spatial indicators framework to assess local lived environments according to each Age-Friendly Cities and Communities (AFC) domain. The selection of these AFC spatial indicators can be applied within local neighbourhoods, census tracts, suburbs, municipalities, or cities with minimal resource requirements other than applied spatial analysis, which addresses past critiques of the Age-Friendly Community movement. The framework has great potential for applications within local, national, and international policy and planning contexts in the future.Entities:
Keywords: age-friendly; health; indicators; neighbourhoods; planning; spatial; tools
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33096773 PMCID: PMC7588877 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The eight interconnected domains of the Age-Friendly Communities framework [35].
Age-Friendly Communities (AFC) domains and suggested spatial indicators.
| AFC Domains | Suggested Spatial Indicators for AFC Assessment and Monitoring |
|---|---|
| 1. Outdoor spaces and buildings |
Walkability for transport (with and without footpaths) * Access to public open space within 400 m * Intersections serviced with pedestrian crossings Access to public seating Access to public toilets (with and without accessibility features)
|
| 2. Transport |
Access to a public transport stop within 400 m * Access to a public transport stop within 400 m with a regular service every 30 min (7 a.m.–7 p.m.) * Access to public transport with Disability Standards for Accessible Public Transport Bus stops with seats/shelters Disabled car parking access Community transport measure (if possible) |
| 3. Housing |
Proportion of households in the bottom 40% of incomes spending more than 30% of income on housing costs * Housing diversity according to eight different housing types Proportion of government owned dwellings Access to services for older people [ |
| 4. Social Participation |
Access to neighbourhood houses/community centres * Recreational services catered to older people e.g., a YMCA * Access to libraries Access to Universities of the 3rd Age (U3As) Access to places of worship |
| 5. Respect and social inclusion |
Access to social clubs/senior citizens clubs * Access to local cafés measured by distance * Membership of Clubs like Probus and Rotary |
| 6. Civic participation and employment |
Proportion of population aged 60+ years regularly volunteering * Proportion of population working beyond official retirement age (currently 66 years in Australia) * |
| 7. Communications and information |
Proportion of households with access to the internet * Proportion of households with mobile phone reception Access to ABC or national broadcaster radio |
| 8. Community support and health services |
Access to General Practitioners * Access to Geriatricians Access to residential aged care accommodation Access to Commonwealth Support Home Packages (funding supporting ageing in the home if available) * |
| Additional contextual factors for consideration include: the Estimated Resident Population; proportion of population aged more than 60 years; population age distribution including proportions of older and younger populations in area; ethnicity; education; homeownership; residential density; remoteness e.g., Accessibility/Remoteness Indices or the distance between towns in rural settings; the risk of natural disasters; climatic conditions; and the impact of climate change. | |
* Recommended as priority indicators for inclusion.
Figure 2An example of a walkability assessment for the city of Launceston, Tasmania, Australia [52].