WHO / Tom Pietrasik
A man and his granddaughter wear face masks while sitting a distance apart from each other in a middle class household of north Delhi.
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Ageing

    Overview

    Every person – in every country in the world – should have the opportunity to live a long and healthy life. Yet, the environments in which we live can favour health or be harmful to it. Environments are highly influential on our behaviour and our exposure to health risks (for example, air pollution or violence), our access to services (for example, health and social care) and the opportunities that ageing brings. 

    The number and proportion of people aged 60 years and older in the population is increasing. In 2019, the number of people aged 60 years and older was 1 billion. This number will increase to 1.4 billion by 2030 and 2.1 billion by 2050. This increase is occurring at an unprecedented pace and will accelerate in coming decades, particularly in developing countries.

    This historically significant change in the global population requires adaptations to the way societies are structured across all sectors. For example, health and social care, transportation, housing and urban planning. Working to make the world more age-friendly is an essential and urgent part of our changing demographics.

     

    Impact

    Ageing presents both challenges and opportunities. It will increase demand for primary health care and long-term care, require a larger and better trained workforce, intensify the need for physical and social environments to be made more age-friendly, and call for everyone in every sector to combat ageism. Yet, these investments can enable the many contributions of older people – whether it be within their family, to their local community (e.g., as volunteers or within the formal or informal workforce) or to society more broadly.

    Societies that adapt to this changing demographic and invest in healthy ageing can enable individuals to live both longer and healthier lives and for societies to reap the dividends.

     
    WHO Response

    WHO works with Member States, UN agencies and diverse stakeholders from various sectors to foster healthy ageing in every country. Healthy ageing is defined as developing and maintaining the functional ability that enables well-being in older age. Functional ability is determined by the intrinsic capacity of an individual (i.e., an individual’s physical and mental capacities), the environment in which he or she lives (understood in the broadest sense and including physical, social and policy environments) and the interactions among them.

    WHO does this work in line with the Global strategy and action plan on ageing and health 2016–2020 and the related UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021–2030) in the following four action areas:

    • change how we think, feel and act towards age and ageing;
    • ensure that communities foster the abilities of older people;
    • deliver person-centred integrated care and primary health services responsive to older people; and
    • provide access to long-term care for older people who need it.


     

    News

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    Our work

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    Improving understanding, measurement and monitoring of healthy ageing

    Improving understanding, measurement and monitoring of healthy ageing

    Overview

     

    With the adoption of the United Nation's (UN) Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021–2030)  by the 75th General Assembly on 14 December 2020 and by the 73rd World Health Assembly on 3 August 2020, countries have committed to 10 years of concerted and collaborative actions to improve the lives of the older people (defined as age 60 years and over), their families and the communities in which they reside.  

    WHO ageing data portal stores and displays country, regional and global data on important ageing health indicators. (Access ageing country profiles). However, there is a greater need to review existing indicators and identify the measurement gaps to strengthen monitoring and evaluation activities of the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing. Many indicators need to be operationalized from a programmatic perspective for the actions areas, and guidance on measures, data collection, analysis and reporting is urgently needed to support global, regional and national monitoring of the actions, programmes and policies.

    Making progress on Healthy Ageing will require a far better understanding of age-related issues and trends. Three approaches will be crucial for improving measurement of ageing and health.
     
    These are:

    • agreeing on metrics, measures and analytical approaches;
    • monitoring trajectories across the different population groups, including variation across and within countries; and
    • conducting research to ageing and health to improve intrinsic capacity and functional ability across the life course in diverse contexts, involving multiple sectors (health, social, and others), and sharing evidence on what can be done to meet the distinct needs and goals of older populations

    To support these approaches WHO coordinates a broad range of activities.

    These include :

    • development of normative tools, including standardized survey instruments and related manuals;
    • supporting countries to improve their capacity to collect, analyse and use data on ageing and health; and
    • supporting multi-country ageing and health surveys to improve Healthy Ageing in light of social, gender and biologic determinants, roles of health and other social systems, and broader social and economic context

     

     

    Latest publications

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    Report of the fourth Life Course Network meeting, 18-19 November 2024 - Extending healthy ageing across the life course: connecting healthy development and healthy ageing
    Report of the 4th Life Course Network meeting, 18-19 November 2024 - Extending healthy ageing across the life course: connecting healthy development and...
    Integrated care for older people (‎ICOPE)‎: guidance for person-centred assessment and pathways in primary care, 2nd ed

    The ICOPE handbook supports health and care workers to put evidence- based recommendations into practice in primary care including community. The handbook...

    Framework to implement a life course approach in practice

    The WHO Framework to implement a life course approach in practice summarizes current evidence to reorient health systems to produce health and well-being,...