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Epidemiology of Aging in Canada

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... live alone compared to 34 % of women. ... The Elderly and Finance 2001. Average income of Canadian seniors is $21, ... Very old, women, immigrants. The Elderly as a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Epidemiology of Aging in Canada


1
Epidemiology of Aging in Canada
John Puxty, Queens University puxtyj_at_post.queensu.
ca
2
Learning Objectives
  • By the end of this section, the student will be
    able to demonstrate knowledge of various
    socioeconomic parameters involved in aged and
    aging individuals including
  • main causes for current and future demographic
    trends within Canada
  • importance of factors such as housing, finance
    and nutrition as predictors of health and
    wellness
  • role of seniors within Canadian Society
  • impact of illness on functional independence

3
One in Seven Canadians soon to be One in Four
4
Proportion of Population Worldwide Over 65 Years
of Age
5
  • Aging Demographics in Canada 1991-2041

of Total Population
6
Why do we have an Aging Population?
  • Increased Life Expectancy

7
Why do we have an Aging Population?
  • Increased Life Expectancy
  • Reduced birth rate now
  • Aging of baby boomers

8
Population Age Distribution
9
Why do we have an Aging Population?
  • Increased Life Expectancy
  • Reduced birth rate now
  • Aging of baby boomers
  • Reduced immigration rate
  • Immigration has been major cause of population
    growth. Approximately 3 of immigrant in 1996
    were seniors

10
Distribution of Elderly in 2001
11
The Elderly within Canada in 2001
  • 75 of all seniors live in Ontario, Quebec, and
    British Columbia
  • Only 17 of seniors found in rural areas (c.f.
    25 of those between 55-64 years old)
  • In 1996 only 3.5 of Aboriginals were seniors but
    expected to triple by 2016

12
Distribution of Elderly in 2021
13
The Elderly Geographically in 2001
75 of all seniors live in Ontario, Quebec, and
British Columbia Only 17 of seniors found in
rural areas (c.f. 25 of those between 55-64
years old) In 1996 only 3.5 of Aboriginals were
seniors but expected to triple by 2016
14
Immigrants and Aging
New immigrants in 1920sToday's Seniors!
15
Immigrants and Aging
  • Estimated one in four seniors were born outside
    Canada. Approximately 3 of immigrant in 1996
    were seniors
  • In 1996, 5.2 of senior women, versus 3.5 of
    their male counterparts, were unable to converse
    in either official language
  • The majority of such immigrants reach a level of
    prosperity comparable to the general population.
    However, some experience alarming levels of
    poverty and maybe exempt from usual forms of
    income supplementation.

16
The Elderly and Housing in 2001
  • 93 live in private households. Of these 2/3 live
    with family. Only 14 men live alone compared to
    34 of women.
  • Most live in single-detached houses (61). Next
    most common is apartments (28).
  • In 1991 6.4 (203,695) of seniors lived in
    institutions (c.f. 8 in 1981)

17
The Elderly and Finance
18
The Elderly and Finance
Distribution of after-tax expenditures of
seniors, 1999
19
Canadian Pensions 2004
  • OAS/GIS and CPP/QPP account gt50 income
  • Rates are adjusted quarterly based on CPI)

20
The Elderly and Finance 2001
  • Average income of Canadian seniors is 21,000 per
    year
  • Average income of men (24,500) falls with age -
    27,500 for 65-69 falling to 18,700 for 85
    group
  • Little change in income of women (15,300) with
    age
  • Between 1980-1999 couples with low income fell
    from 13 to 4

21
The Elderly and Finance 2001
22
The Elderly and Finance 2001
  • Average income of Canadian seniors is 21,000 per
    year
  • Average income of men (24,500) falls with age -
    27,500 for 65-69 falling to 18,700 for 85
    group
  • Little change in income of women (15,300) with
    age
  • Between 1980-1999 couples with low income fell
    from 13 to 4
  • Certain sub-groups have much higher poverty
    levels eg. Very old, women, immigrants

23
The Elderly as a Resource 2001
  • 1996 40 seniors had high-school or post-
    secondary education. However, 40 handicapped by
    deficiency in literacy skills
  • 1997 23 seniors provided volunteer services.
    Value of such services estimated in excess 5.5
    billion!
  • 1981 seniors contributed on average 803 to
    charity compared to 549 all Canadian tax payers

24
The Elderly as a Resource 2001
Average hours per week volunteers spend on those
activities, by age, 2000
25
Reasons for Retirement
  • Compulsory 29 men and 11 women
  • Health issues 34 men and 38 women
  • Job loss 7 men and 4 women
  • Other includes large early retirement group
    (physical or psychologically demanding
    occupations, professionals)

26
Retirement
27
Preferences and Retirement
  • 40 of retired people would have preferred a
    transition
  • Older Canadians tend to work if occupations allow
    flexibility 70 farm workers work beyond 65,
    higher education is also factor. However health
    and financial factors important
  • Second career increasingly relevant

28
Functional Problems and Age
29
Sources of Care-giving
30
Sandwich Generation
31
Sandwich Generation
  • Almost 3 in 10 of those aged 45 to 64 in 2002,
    with unmarried children under 25 in the home,
    (712,000 individuals) were also caring for a
    senior
  • 80 report impact on ability to work
  • Women were more likely than men to be sandwiched.
    On average, women spent 29 hours a month
    providing care to seniors, compared to
    just 13 hours spent by their male counterparts

32
Aging and Care-giving
  • 18 of those over 65 have no living offspring
  • Nearly 20 have family living more than 90
    minutes away by car
  • Extremely old have old relatives
  • Seniors are often caregivers themselves!
  • Majority of seniors elect for LTC vs living with
    family

33
Aging and Health
34
Aging and Health
35
Aging and Health
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