| Literature DB >> 35270438 |
Davide Lucantoni1, Andrea Principi1, Marco Socci1, Marina Zannella1, Francesco Barbabella1.
Abstract
In ageing societies, active ageing (AA) has been recognized as a useful conceptual tool due to its holistic approach to social issues and recognised benefits from it at multiple levels (micro, meso and macro) for addressing demographic challenges. However, one of the main problems identified in relation to AA, is to turn into practice, at the policy making level, the many positive aspects that it promises at the conceptual level, as is demonstrated by the available evidence based on experiences carried out in some European countries. As an advancement in this field, through an original research experience carried out in Italy between 2019 and 2021, this study for the first time provides a model for producing recommendations for policy making and policy implementation in the field of AA, by managing the main problematic aspects related to the operationalization, at the policy making level, of the AA concept, with the potential for replication in other countries. The main challenges were identified, as well as the way to deal with them through a model, for a proper operationalization of the AA concept, based, among other aspects, on a solid international framework concerning this matter, on a mainstreaming ageing approach (at the public policy level) and on a wide stakeholder participation through co-decisional tools. A multi-level (national-regional-local) perspective was adopted to consider cultural and geographical diversity, among other challenges.Entities:
Keywords: European national strategies; active ageing; evidence-based policy making; policy recommendations
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35270438 PMCID: PMC8910036 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19052746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Challenges and possible solutions regarding policy making in the field of active ageing.
| Challenge | Possible Solution | |
|---|---|---|
| C1 | Narrow policy approach | To adopt a comprehensive international policy framework |
| C2 | Policy silos | To mainstream active ageing in all policy fields |
| C3 | Top-down approach | To involve relevant stakeholders through co-decisional tools |
| C4 | One-fits-all approach | To respect cultural diversity by differentiating policy solutions according to the contexts |
| C5 | Limited equal opportunities for older people | To provide opportunities for all, considering inequalities |
| C6 | Age-segregation approach | To adopt a life-course perspective through promoting intergenerational relationships and solidarity |
| C7 | Mainly work-oriented approach | To promote participation in all social domains |
Figure 1Conceptual framework.
The international policy framework.
| MIPAA Commitment | SDGs Linked to the MIPAA |
|---|---|
| 1 Mainstreaming ageing | 1 No poverty |
| 2 Integration and participation | 3 Good health and well-being |
| 3 Economic growth | 4 Quality education |
| 4 Social security | 5 Gender equality |
| 5 Labour markets | 8 Decent work and economic growth |
| 6 Lifelong learning | 10 Reduced inequalities |
| 7 Quality of life, independent living and health | 11 Sustainable cities and communities |
| 8 Gender equality | 16 Peace, justice and strong institutions |
| 9 Support to families providing care and intergenerational solidarity | 17 Partnerships for the goals |
| 10 Regional co-operation |
Data source: UNECE [23]—https://unece.org/DAM/pau/RIS.pdf (accessed on 7 December 2021); United Nations [11]—https://www.un.org/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/70/1&Lang=E (accessed on 7 December 2021).
Overview of national AA strategies in Europe.
| Country | Title | Year/s | Recommendations 1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulgaria | National Strategy for Active Ageing in Bulgaria [ | 2019–2030 | No |
| Czech Republic | National Action Plan Supporting Positive Ageing [ | 2013–2017 | No |
| Ireland | The National Positive Ageing Strategy [ | 2013 | No |
| Latvia | Developing a Comprehensive Active Ageing Strategy for Longer and Better Working Lives [ | 2014–2016 | Yes |
| Malta | National Strategic Policy for Active Ageing [ | 2014–2020 | Yes |
| Slovenia | Active Ageing Strategy [ | 2017 | Yes * |
| Spain | Framework of action for older persons [ | 2014 | Yes ** |
1 Yes = developed, No = not developed; * Guidelines; ** Proposals.
Adherence of European AA strategies to the conceptual framework.
| Country | C1 | C2 | C3 | C4 | C5 | C6 | C7 |
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| Bulgaria |
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| Ireland |
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| Latvia |
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| N.A. |
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| Malta |
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Legend: : Covered : Partially covered : Uncovered.
Figure 2Pathway to evidence-based recommendations for policy making.
Subjects and purposes of the national PoA on active ageing.
| Subject | MIPAA | SDG | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Mainstreaming ageing in all policy fields | 1 | Overcoming the sectoral visions and fostering a system perspective in order to address the challenges related to ageing. In the field of active ageing, positive experiences both at the national and local levels, are those that promote and put into practice an inter-ministerial or inter-departmental (at the regional level) collaboration, overcoming the classic approach that delegates the production and management of interventions in this area to social and health policies. | |
| 2 To ensure the full integration and participation of older people in society | 2 | To promote the integration and participation of older people in society, in all areas of active ageing, without exception, to ensure that all possible opportunities are provided, among which older people can freely choose on the basis of their preferences, motivations and predispositions. | |
| 3 To strengthen the partnership | 17 | To involve relevant stakeholders in all processes (from the production of policies on active ageing, to the implementation of services and related monitoring) with consultation and co-decisional tools. The subject is strongly linked to the previous two, as it strengthens the integration and participation of older people in society by integrating consultation and co-decision into mainstream ageing tools. | |
| 4 To promote the fight against inequalities and poverty, fostering a fair and sustainable economic growth | 3 | 1;10 | Inequalities are considered as barriers that prevent access to active ageing paths, which must be guaranteed to the entire older population regardless of differences in cultural resources, income, education and health, precisely in order to reduce them. This vision, therefore, does not include the strictly welfare part of older people in need of social and health care, but rather those cases in which inequalities are given by differences in access to resources and the ability to achieve their own life goals, with respect, for example, to specific socio-economic conditions. |
| 5 Modification of social protection systems in response to demographic changes and their socio-economic consequences | 4 | While generally this commitment is exclusively traced back to the issue of pensions, in reference to active ageing, by social protection it is meant something broader, which, in addition to the theme of combating inequalities and poverty (see the previous point), it includes the construction and redefinition of a new welfare system. | |
| 6 Adapting the labor market to respond to the economic and social consequences of an ageing population | 5 | 8 | Employment is considered as an important dimension, among those that pertain to the concept of active ageing promoted through commitment 2. Ensuring participation of older people in this area is a necessity for both institutions and companies, in particular in managing the effects of the extension of working life both on the production process and as a function of the mechanisms of intergenerational exchange and transmission of knowledge. |
| 7 Promotion of lifelong learning and adaptation of the educational system in response to economic, social and demographic changes | 6 | 4 | Poor levels of education can have negative repercussions throughout the life span, becoming an obstacle to the pursuit of healthy and active ageing. The theme of education and learning also has a considerable impact on other important dimensions. For example, that of income (as low education is generally correlated with low income), with direct repercussions on the type of work performed, on the state of health and on the quality of life. |
| 8 To promote initiatives to ensure quality of life, independence, health and well-being. | 7 | 3 | Health and quality of life are key elements in the field of active ageing, which, as a result, contribute to obtaining positive feedback in this sense, so that benefits in terms of health and quality of life are also enjoyed by people with a health deficit. On the other hand, greater health problems imply greater problems in accessing active ageing. |
| 9 Enhancement of the gender approach in a society characterized by demographic ageing | 8 | 5 | The issue of the gender approach, highly regarded by MIPAA and the 2030 Agenda for sustainable development, can be considered as a specific declination of the more general problem of inequalities. |
| 10 To support families providing care to older people and to promote intergenerational solidarity | 9 | 16 | Support provided to families, in relation to care activities, should be not only a responsibility of the governmental bodies that provides these services, but also of the community in general, with a view to solidarity. To consider the life cycle perspective is critical for several reasons. Therefore, it is also necessary to think about active ageing to prepare future generations to face old age in the best possible way. |
| 11 Sustainable cities | 11 | In order to guarantee to older people access to all the opportunities for active ageing, it is important to consider the methods of access to the services and active ageing paths which are present in the area, in terms of organization of transports, adequacy of housing and infrastructure. | |
| 12 Cooperation for the promotion and full realization of the Regional Strategy for the implementation of the MIPAA | 10 | The strategy for the implementation of the MIPAA (Regional Implementation Strategy—RIS) consists in making sure that everything that has been discussed through the previous points is concretely realized. |
MIPAA Commitment 1: Mainstreaming ageing.
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| To provide long-term tools for coordination, analysis, planning and monitoring of active ageing policies at national level, by involving all the Ministries, Departments at the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, Regions and Autonomous Provinces. |
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| To provide long-term tools for coordination, analysis, planning, implementation and monitoring of active ageing policies at regional level, by involving all regional departments/services, as well as other important institutional regional actors. |
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Creation of a National Observatory on Active Ageing. Creation of regional tools such as “Permanent working tables on active ageing”, or similar. |
MIPAA Commitment 2: Integration and participation.
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| To ensure full integration and participation of older people in society at the national and regional levels through specific and adequate laws and regulations |
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| To ensure actual (rather than just remaining on paper) full integration and participation of older people in society as provided by laws, decrees, resolutions and other regulatory documents. |
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Approval an implementation of a national framework law, for a comprehensive promotion of active ageing. Approval an implementation of regional laws or similar regulations, for a comprehensive promotion of active ageing. |
SDG 17: Partnerships for the goals.
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| To ensure that, beyond representatives of institutional/governmental bodies, both at the national and the regional level, also all relevant stakeholders (from the third sector and civil society, the academic-scientific sector, etc.) are included in long-term tools for the analysis, planning, implementation and monitoring of policies in the field of active ageing, in order to guarantee co-decisional participatory mechanisms. |
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To guarantee sustainability over time of the stakeholder network created at national level within the project “National multi-level co-managed coordination of active ageing policies”. To create or activate (in case they exist but still they remain on paper) a stakeholder networks in each Region/Autonomous Province. |
MIPAA Commitment 3: Reduced Inequalities; MIPAA Commitment 3: Economic growth; SDG 1: No poverty.
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| To promote policies to combat inequalities and poverty, in order to guarantee the possibility of ageing actively also to older people with few resources available in terms of health and socio-economic conditions. Opportunities should be provided not only in terms of economic help, but also in terms of activation in the various domains of active ageing, according to the characteristics of the territory and promoting the development of digital skills among older people. |
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To strengthen, in the area of welfare services of the Local Authority, the implementation of counters for, taking into account inequalities between them, accompanying older people towards active ageing paths. To promote the development and coordination of national and regional initiatives, aimed at reducing the digital divide of the older population, and at promoting digital literacy, since the latter are actions capable of combating inequalities and fostering active ageing; and of guaranteeing independence, empowerment and equity of access to services and information, in response to individual needs (digital citizenship). |
MIPAA Commitment 4: Social security.
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| In order to promote adequate social protection in response to demographic changes, and their socio-economic consequences, it is necessary build a new welfare system through the development of a multi-level institutional governance, both at national and regional level, which integrates the perspective of ageing throughout life, and in the different life spheres. |
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Realisation of a system of proximity services for protection and social integration of older people who live in disadvantaged areas, for example: mountain villages, inland areas and suburbs. |
MIPAA Commitment 5: Labour markets; SDG 8: Decent work.
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| To promote, at all levels and alongside possible existing ones, the implementation of policies stimulating age management initiatives both in the private and the public sectors. These initiatives are necessary to guarantee: |
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To mature workers: the development of more opportunities and quality of the working conditions, resources and skills, including forms of work regulation and organization, to enhance intergenerational differences. To employers: the achievement of better economic results, also in terms of corporate social responsibility, by at the same time providing older workers with a better work climate, thus improving their work motivation, satisfaction and productivity, enhancing the potential of intergenerational teamwork. |
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| To promote active labor market policies at national and local level, which should be functional to vocational retraining, to skill-updating and to work reintegration of all those who wish so (mature unemployed and/or disadvantaged individuals; retired older people, etc.). |
MIPAA Commitment 6: Lifelong learning; SDG 4: Quality education.
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| To strengthen lifelong learning within a global strategy with the “Plan for the development of skills of the adult population” as a strategic tool, to represent a solid reference base for guiding targeted interventions that could be also funded within the European programming. |
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| To strengthen lifelong learning by promoting intergenerational knowledge exchange in a bidirectional way across various domains (e.g., areas, for example, passing on of knowledge by older people; passing on of digital skills by younger people). |
MIPAA Commitment 7: Quality of life, independent living and health; SDG 3: Good health and wellbeing.
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| In order to improve the implementation of preventative tools, to provide training programs and policies able to strengthen competences in the community, and also including the promotion of active ageing among other tools. |
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| To create bridges between the health (doctors, geriatricians, health workers in general) and the gerontological (gerontologists, professions relating to the social aspects of ageing) perspectives, also through a two-way training for the operators of these two fields, in order to exploit and coordinate in a more effective way the activities developed in the area of active ageing. |
MIPAA Commitment 8 and SDG 5: Gender equality.
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| To consider the issue of gender inequalities, in all areas of active ageing. |
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| To plan tools to implement gender-related initiatives required by regulations. |
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| To promote specific policies and initiatives to combat violence, abuse and discrimination against older women, also in light of the social transformations of the family under way, thus fostering their activation in the various active ageing domains. |
MIPAA Commitment 9: Support to families providing care; SDG 16: Peace and (intergenerational) justice.
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| To facilitate caregivers in the access to all relevant information they need (including information on how to carry out care activities in relation to the specific diseases suffered by older people), through the creation of specific digital platforms (or the development of those already existing), for also providing training and information on the management of the disease. |
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| To promote the recognition of the rights and of the activities carried out by the caregiver, in the perspective of combating inequalities, including those related to health; promoting a gender approach, also creating a network in the community in order to facilitate the relationships between families and public and private services, also considering elements of training for family carers. |
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| Through services and devices, to provide older people and their caregivers the possibility of combining the illness and the care activity with their life-project within the community, e.g., relative to the work for the labour market or to other active ageing domains (learning, leisure and cultural activities, volunteering, etc.). |
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| It is necessary to encourage intergenerational dialogue in a positive and bidirectional way, also to the aim of promoting the life-course perspective. |
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Creation of a register of non-self-sufficient older people |
SDG 11: Sustainable cities and communities.
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| To promote initiatives to facilitate mobility and access to community services (including educational ones) of older people, both in terms of time-flexibility and of adaptation of public transportation, as well as of pedestrian and cycle walkways. |
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| To promote both the development of enabling technologies and the adaptation of building and urban planning standards, for the reorganization of living spaces, even in co-housing situations, in an active ageing perspective. To also adopt criteria for the assessment of the quality of the houses of older and frail people. |
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| To promote the different types of co-housing (e.g., inter and intra-generational, neighborhood co-housing, eco-rural villages, social housing, etc.) in older age and innovative strategies of urban regeneration, in order to promote active participation in social life. |
Older people in emergency situations.
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| To provide plans taking into account both older people’s needs and the contribution that they can offer in all the stages: preparation, support and response to the emergency. |
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| To promote data collection and data process related to health and living conditions of older people during emergency situations, to encourage the implementation and the transferability of good practices. |
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| To consider the condition of older people in emergency situations, in a cross-cutting way with respect to the MIPAA commitments and the Sustainable Development Goals previously discussed. |
MIPAA Commitment 10: Regional co-operation.
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| To keep active ageing at the top of the political agenda at the national, regional and local governmental level, also via media, through an effort by all the relevant stakeholders. |
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| To take into account, in all the relevant laws and policies at all levels, within public, private and third sector organisations, including by older people themselves, each according to the respective competences and available resources, all the recommendations expressed in this document, to guarantee that the rights of older people are respected. |
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To strengthen the available statistics about living conditions of older people. |