| Literature DB >> 35627677 |
Marion F Krings1, Jeroen D H van Wijngaarden1, Shasha Yuan2, Robbert Huijsman1.
Abstract
Until the 1980s, institutional elder care was virtually unknown in China. In a few decades, China had to construct a universal social safety net and assure basic elderly care. China's government has been facing several challenges: the eroding traditional family care, the funding to assure care services for the older population, as well as the shortage of care delivery services and nursing staff. This paper examines China's Five-Year Policy Plans from 1994 to 2020. Our narrative review analysis focuses on six main topics revealed in these policies: care infrastructure, community involvement, home-based care, filial piety, active aging and elder industry. Based on this analysis, we identified several successive and often simultaneously strategic steps that China introduced to contend with the aging challenge. In Western countries, elder care policies have been shifting to the home care approach. China introduced home care as the elder care cornerstone and encouraged the revival of the filial piety tradition. Although China has a unique approach, the care policies for the aged population in China and Western countries are converging by emphasizing home-based care, informal care and healthy aging.Entities:
Keywords: China; aging policy; elder care; policy analysis; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35627677 PMCID: PMC9141963 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19106141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Frequency of attention on the six themes.
Highlights of China’s elderly care policies 1994–2020.
| Policy Plan | Development Trend and Elderly Concern in the Respective Policies | Major Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Seven Year Plan 1994–2000 | Economic level: High economic growth Membership in World Trade Organization Economic development as solution for aging problem Increasing income disparity Set-up of nation-wide health care insurance and Pension system Basic welfare support First request for family tradition of supporting elderly First mention of support of elderly spiritual well-being First mention of active aging and self-support First mention of elderly to practice fitness First mention of protection of elderly rights and interests |
1996: China’s Elderly Rights and Protection Law |
| 10th Five-Year Plan 2001–2005 | Economic level: High economic growth GDP growth rate in decade approximately 9.6% Worldwide major global player Accelerate science and technology Aging challenge will be put in overall plan of economy Introduce foreign capital in elderly care development Growing poverty rate among elderly Care services inaccessible and unaffordable Promote better care services and geriatric training Education for elderly also in preventive health care First mention of elderly self-reliance |
2003: Fight against SARS epidemic and eradication 2004: Between 1981 and 2004, China lifted over half a billion people out of poverty |
| 11th Five-Year Plan 2006–2010 | Economic level: China maintains high rank in world market Social unrest State responds ‘care for entire population’ Major emphasis on welfare Use Public Welfare Lottery Fund for aged care First mention of elderly industry Inaccessible health care State responds with major health care reform Training of community nurses and GPs Set-up of geriatric facilities Special emphasis on family harmony Encourage to do sports and cultural activities |
2006: The central government indicates new strategy to ‘put people first’ 2007: Confucian teachings and moral values are promulgated 2009: Major health care reform with primary care and hospital as key areas |
| 12th Five-Year Plan 2011–2015 | Economic level: Worldwide expansion New normal economic development: consumption driven, more service-oriented Social development and environmental protection Promulgation of new elderly care structure Emphasis on moral education, in particular on the filial piety virtue Promote elderly friendly cities and livable communities Encourage elderly to participate in economic development and volunteering |
2011: Law on mandatory social insurances; Over 95% of the Chinese population is covered by health insurance; New elderly care structure: elderly home-based care as foundation; community elderly care as support; and state institutional care as supplement Goal: 30 beds per 1000 elderly |
| 13th Five-Year Plan 2016–2020 | Economic level: Belt and Road Initiative is expanding on international and China’s regional levels Lower GDP growth rate at 6.8% Still significant income disparity Urge elderly industry and marketization Moral values and filial piety must be honored Promote self-confidence of elderly At least 12% of the elderly population should engage in volunteering Support elderly to start own business |
2016: The state launches plan “Healthy China 2030”, emphasizing care of chronic diseases 2017: Basic pension insurance participation rate reaches 90% The proportion paid by households out of-pocket declined from 60% in 2000 to 29% in 2017 Central government launches “Action Plan for the Development of Smart Health and the Elderly Care Industry (2017–2020)” 2020: Basic health insurance covers entire urban and rural population; over a billion people are protected by catastrophe medical insurance |