Growing Age Friendly Communities why not? · 2019-10-30 · Lovefest • Partnership with Gay...

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Growing Age

Friendly

Communities

– why not?

Ageism

…is the stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination

towards people based on age.

Stereotype: What we think

Prejudice: How we feel

Discrimination: What we do

“Ageism is the last acceptable prejudice”

“ Ageism is the prejudice against our own

future selves”

“This Chair Rocks” – Ashton Applewhite, US Ageism Activist

“In an age friendly community, policies,

services, settings and structures support and

enable people to age actively.”

World Health Organisation 2007

World Health Organisation Global Network Age

Friendly Communities

• 990 cities and communities in 48 countries

• 14 affiliated country programs

• Reaching over 240 million people

• 2.5 million people

• 2.6 million km

People 60 years plus are 19% of population (26% in 2050)

• 73% live in Metropolitan Perth City

• 27% live in Country regions

• 50% born overseas

• 19% from Non-English speaking background

2006:

2008:

2012:

2017:

2017:

Partnered with Melville on pilot WHO AFC project

Grant program to support Local Governments to

undertake age-friendly planning

Released ‘An Age-Friendly WA: The Seniors

Strategic Planning Framework 2012-2017’

Affiliate membership for State to the WHO Global

Network

Evaluation of Age-Friendly Grants program

State Journey

• $777,000 to 82 local governments to support age-friendly planning since 2006

• Over half of WA’s local governments committed to implementing age-friendly principles

• Over 83% of Western Australians aged 60+ living in a local

government area that has received funding

• Age-friendly principles included in local government integrated

planning and reporting

• Elder Abuse Alliance

• Incorporating dementia-friendly principles

State Journey

World Health Organisation

Domains

• Outdoor spaces and Buildings

• Transport

• Housing

• Social Participation

• Respect and Inclusion

• Civic Participation and Employment

• Communication and Information

• Community Support and Health

Services

What’s happening already?

• Libraries

• Waste Services

• Recreation Services

• Accessible infrastructure – Footpath programs

• Council funding programs

• Access Advisory Groups

The Age Friendly Lens….

What’s happening already? Use existing plans

• Disability and Access

• Community Safety and Crime Prevention

• Health and Wellbeing

• Volunteer Management

• Emergency Management

• Reconciliation Action

The Age Friendly Lens…..

City of Melville

• Population: 102,000 people

• People over 60 years: 25%

• Aboriginal people: 0.7%

• People from Non-English speaking backgrounds (18%):

- Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese)

- Italian

- Indonesian

World Health Organisation

Domains

• Outdoor spaces and Buildings

• Transport

• Housing

• Social Participation

• Respect and Inclusion

• Civic Participation and

Employment

• Communication and Information

• Community Support and Health

Services

Engagement

• Over 2,300 participants 2013 – 2017

• Survey (hard copy and online, “Melville Talks”)

• One to one conversations

• Pop up engagement –talking to community

• Community Reference Group – older people, carers, different age

groups, male and female, aged care service providers

• Strategic Community Plan and Local Housing Strategy (Seniors)

• Collecting information via

culturally aware processes

• Art workshops facilitated by

Aboriginal people to gather

information over 16 week period

• Informal story telling sessions to

gather information

Age-Friendly Planning - Melville

Priorities

• Respect, Inclusion and Social

Participation

• Transport

• Housing

Challenges

• Socially isolated older people (how to engage and involve)

• Provision of information

• High number of people living with dementia (second

highest local government community in Western

Australia); 80% of people living with dementia live in the

community

• Feedback regarding retail/shopping experiences not

inclusive and lack of awareness regarding dementia

MAFAB

Memory Café

Sonder

Sonder

“the realisation that each random passer-by is

living a life as vivid and complex as your own."

Age-Friendly & Dementia-Friendly

• Not an “either” “or” decision

• Dementia-friendly part of being age-friendly

• Alzheimer’s WA work collaboratively with local

government sector regarding initiatives and approaches

• Partnership with Alzheimer’s WA, City of Melville,

Centre for Attitudinal Healing – Michael Verde

workshops 2015, 2017, 2019

Partnerships

Lovefest

• Partnership with Gay

Rights in Ageing

• A social photographer

captured the lives of

people living with

dementia and their loved

ones, exhibited in a large

shopping centre

• Workshops for aged care

providers

Recreation Services

Recreation Services – reducing barriers to participation

In supporting healthy ageing/falls prevention, an age

friendly scaled discount is offered to those over 70 years

(off peak memberships 11am – 3pm)

• 70 years 40% discount through to 90 years 90%

discount

Fit for Life

How do we know its working?

• Ongoing evaluation - surveys at

Seniors events, forums and other

community events

• Community Wellbeing Survey

• Wellbeing Scorecard

• Community Perceptions Survey

(Set benchmark 2018)

• Actions from AF Plan

LG Professionals WA Network

Age Friendly Communities

• Established March 2015

• Forums held each year:

→ WHO Age-Friendly Methodology

→ Age-Friendly Planning

→ Dementia-Friendly integration

→ Regional Forums

→ Connecting Communities (community development practice)

→ Injury prevention

→ Research Forum (engaging with universities)

Australian Forum November 2019

More Information

Age-Friendly Melville

www.melvillecity.com.au

https://www.melvillecity.com.au/our-community/age-friendly-

melville/living-well-with-dementia

WHO Age Friendly World

https://extranet.who.int/agefriendlyworld

Lovefest

https://www.museumoflove.com.au

Christine Young, Presenter

christine.young@melville.wa.gov.au