The Autumn Of Life : Work For a Cause not for Applause

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Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Mobile Medicare Units


 Many Elderly people can not afford medical treatment or going to big cities for treatment, so "HelpAge India"-  NGO for Elderly people launched Mobile Medicare Units in 1982. Every MMU  has a qualified Doctor, a social worker, a pharmacit and many medicines that are given free of cost. In the year 2008-2009, 10 Lakh people were treated by  MMU. Its working scope and area is increasing day by day.













Refrence for above article :- http://www.helpageindia.org/relief-mobile-medicare-units.php


Monday, April 16, 2012

Support to Old People



THERE MAY BE QUESTION IN YOUR MIND
WHY TO SUPPORT OLD PEOPLE?
RIGHT????????
Actually there are many reasons but we ignore them so read below and get your reason to support them:

Today there are 77 million old people in India. This number is likely to rise to 177 million by 2025.

#90% of the older people are from unorganized sector with no social security.
#40% of the old live below poverty line.
#75% of the old are from the rural areas.
#55% of the women 60+ in age [a staggering 19 million] are widows.
#73% of the old are illiterate.

advanced age has been one of the greatest achievements of the 20th century. There are older people today than ever before and their number is on the increase.The last century was also responsible for rapid industrialization and urbanization. In India these developments brought about major changes in our social structure. The centuries old joint family system has disintegrated - with it collapsed the safety net of parents and grandparents.Since the welfare of the aged has been a low priority with the state they have nowhere to turn. They are left disillusioned, shattered and lonely.

Future of Old Age


The time moving on and on and on....... right
In the same way your life expectancy is also increasing on and on..To your concern Every minute that you spend reading this article, the average life expectancy in Britain will rise by 12 seconds.12 seconds in Britain then may be 3-4 second in India, but this rate is too not slow.This means by a day:                                


4sec*24hours*60minutes                                             
=5670 sec                                             
=4 hours


WOW!!!!!!!!!!! Amazing you get 4 hours increased in your life expectancy everyday.

The reason is clear: Rapid advances in medicine and biology has been one of the biggest achievements of the past century and we are all living longer. Where anyone reaching the age of 60 was considered to be near death's door at the turn of the 20th century, it is barely old enough for retirement at the turn of the 21st century, And scientists are still not holding back.Is it a boon or bane. I mean to say it may be an attractive idea to live longer but notice the mentality of today's world which leaves the old aged to starve. Who would then take care of them then.


THINK OF IT...............

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Need for NGOs


Can anyone answer my question what is the need to have NGOs to take care of the person whom should be cared by their children?


I know no one have the answer. Today in India more than 20s of NGOs are working for the welfare of the old aged people. What is the need of it.
HAVE WE BECOME SO MUCH LAZY THAT CAN'T CARE OUR PARENTS TOO, OR WE ARE FEEL SHAME TO HAVE THEM WITH US??????

Just think of it all of you>>>>>>>>>
  • Just think if they have felt shame when you were baby and left you alone, then where, at what stage you would be?
  • They took care of you when you needed them then why you are going to leave them at the stage when they need your help?
  • I know you don't have the answer then why are you leaving them without reason?
  • I know your reason might be that they smell or they always need assistance or they always need someone to be with them to help, Isn't it?
  • you too were smelly in your childhood, at that time you too needed assistance and help every time RIGHT????

At last i think there is no reason left with you to leave your parent
So please take care................
THEY NEED YOU!!!!
THEY NEED YOU!!!!
THEY NEED YOU!!!!
THEY REALLY NEED YOU. SO DON'T LEAVE THEM ALONE TO STRUGGLE..........AT THEIR LAST STAGE.......

Monday, April 9, 2012

What do you mean by ADULT EDUCATION


Adult Education is all about literacy, in which adults learn the most basic materials, can develop their personality and even attain advanced degrees. Adult education actually is not only about eradicating illiteracy among adults in the country, it is also about continuing their education which includes the three R’s (reading, writing and arithmetic). Malcolm Knowles is also called the father of adult education, pioneered the field of adult learning in the U.S in the 20th century.


Only though adult education can we address the real problems of society – like power sharing, wealth creation, gender and health issues


said Adama Ouane, director of the UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Health

In a par, every single out of 5 suffers from diabetes by the age of 79. According to 23andme website, DNA variations might raise this to one in three, making lifestyle choices on factors like exercise and weight control even more critical.


Age-related Macular degeneration is the most important cause of irreversible vision loss among old aged people over 60 in western world. If your genes put you at increased risk for this condition, you should go for frequent eye check up and take other necessary measures to protect eye sight.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Injuries and illnesses ‘increase levels of elderly disability


Injuries and Illness increase levels of elderly disability

Washington: The new study reveals that the older adults land up in the hospitals due to deteriorating functional abilities, basically among those who are physically frail.

The research was undertaken by Yale School of Medicine researchers  under the supervision of Thomas M. Gill, a Human foundation Professor of internal medicine (geriatrics).

“We now have a much better understanding of the complex and highly dynamic disabling process” said Gill

Gill and his team examined 754 adults age 70 and older for 10 years with monthly tele-phonic conversation and interviews starting in 1998.

The team learned that out of the 637 participants, 90.7% had been hospitalized at least once and 94.3 % people’s activities have been restricted for a month.

“To address this increase, more aggressive efforts will be needed to prevent and manage intervening illness and injuries, given their apparent role in precipitating and perpetuating the disabling process,” said Gill.


 The report was published in Jama Journal

Monday, December 19, 2011

Something Worth Noticing

Just 5 minutes ago my Mom switched on the TV and an open questionnaire was going on a channel called "Peace TV" over taking care of elderly parents, and a person was telling reality...


He asked that "why do children nowadays leave their parents in a public place, station, hospitals or old age homes? .. Giving answer himself he said that we are already three (I, My wife n my son) and i m the only child of my parents so i have to take care of them feed them and even my wife is also a single child of her parents so he is the only one to feed and give shelter to all 4, so total are 7 and if his grand parents are also there and his wife's grand parents are also there so hes is only one responsible.. so feeding 15 people in this expensive century, in this time with recession is so very difficult".


So what can a person do instead of taking such a harsh step of leaving their parents like.. that is why nowadays their are so many elderlies living in hospitals and old aged homes, who is responsible for this. we can not blame for either ..


so some special rules or major steps should be taken for the problems like this, though these are not found on higher level...


but as we know "precaution is better than cure"

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

About the most twilight years..


Dull memory, failing eyesight, hearing problems, feeble hands and dead beat legs. The vicissitudes of Old Age makes it different for Elderly people to have control on their time and activities . Their dependency on younger family member becomes necessary.

There are many challenges like living with bodily discomfort, to follow medical regimens firmly and to follow dietary advices are challenges which is faced by almost every Elderly.

According to G V Bijur – a retired government audit officer “Old Age and spirituality do hand in glove” while residing in the Octogenarian spends his day in reading spiritual books, meditating humself  and by practicing yoga, After retirement he became the member of spiritual organization. He says that his routine starts at 04:30 AM with meditation and watching spiritual programmes  on TV. And then after he goes to walk for a healthy and fit body.

Buying vegetables and groceries is a part of Bijur’s daily routine.  He reads and exercise after siesta. And in evening he watches Kannada teleserials.

“I have live life to its fullest. During the last days of my service, I helped 10-15 retired person, some of them hapless widows, to get their pension. That was my way of giving back to society” said Bijur, adding upon he said that he has donated many of his body organs to SDM Hospital. Bijur’s wife Jayalaxami who is 77 years old, cooks her self  for the family and has limited dependency on maids. They have 2 children who are married and well settled in Mumbai.

Rukminibai G- 91 year old Elderly women resides with her son. She informed that one of her favorite time pass is to narrate stories to her grandchildren. She goes for a small walk near the house and meets her age group people in the neighborhood. “To maintain good health, I take light food everyday”. Said she.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hubli/Making-the-most-of-their-twilight-years/articleshow/10204078.cms

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Flashing Forward

Have you noticed how easy it is to say something, but to actually do it is a much harder task? Speaking your mind is not the challenge, being able to accomplish what you speak is where the challenge lies. The people of our society today are helping to spread awareness. Awareness about what to eat and what not to eat, awareness about turning the light off to save energy, awareness about how important it is for you to get your sleep at night, awareness about all of these little things but not about the important matters. Matters such as respect. Giving respect to your elders. Why don't we give them respect? We do though, no we don't that is just what we think. Think of all that our elderly do for us. They put their whole life into us. From bringing us into this world to paying thousands and thousands for our college tuition. Trying to give us the best life they possibly can. What do we give them in return? A nice place to live, in the best senior citizen home in the city? Is that all we can do? No matter how much you try you can never repay them in any way for all that they have done for you. At least don't give them into the care of others. It may be easy to do right now, but flash forward to the future. Your future, when your children have matured and are ready start their life. Flash forward to the day they are dropping you off in a senior citizen home. Think of how it will just melt your heart seeing your children leave and walking into you new home. Already waiting from that moment on, for the next upcoming weekend when your children will come visit you. As the golden rule states: "Treat others the way you want to be treated". If you do not wish for this to happen to you, don't do it to others. It is so easy to say, "Mama, papa I love you guys so much & I will never leave you guys". Do not say what you can not do...

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Neglecting the Elderly

There is a collective shame to be placed upon our nation, a shame that challenges the very nature of our humanity, a shame that highlights the cruel irony of the mindset of our nation in the current day.
While we find it easy to complain about crime, corruption, high food prices and all the like, we fail to take stock of ourselves. We should be ashamed of the way we treat and deal with the elderly. Those people who are our parents and grandparents, who made tremendous sacrifices and endured unspeakable hardship to raise their children and provide for their families, are now being treated with disdain and scorn. The elderly, who in most cultures are regarded as sacred; leaders, as troves of wisdom, have now been ostracised to the fringes of society and are regarded as nothing more than a nuisance to be managed.
Many are the stories that can be told of mothers who had no food to eat for themselves and would give what little to their children. Of mothers who had only one outfit to wear and would go barefoot so their children could have money to go to school. Many are the stories of fathers who in order to make ends meet, were reduced to performing manual tasks, often laced with ridicule and insults. Fathers who did not sleep for days, working two and three jobs or planting the land so that they could pay for lessons and books for their children.
One only needs to ask an elderly person of the hardship they endured and the tales rival any of the great classic tragedies. Tales of abuse and discrimination, of racism and starvation, of tears and sacrifice. But our forebears took all of these in stride because they were providing for their progeny, seeking to make their lives better so that they would not have to experience the same hardship.
Now, in the twilight years of their lives when it is time for them to be honoured for their hard work and contribution to their nation, their own children and grandchildren and their nation have thrown them to the wayside. One only has to take a trip to any bank at the beginning of the month to see how the elderly are treated. Their benefactors, who take great joy in collecting their old age pension, abuse them, are impatient with them and treat them worse than animals.
Yes, there are those who honour their elderly, and these people should be praised for recognising that the elderly have dignity and deserve respect. The others, however, who insult their elders and make them cry, are worse than the lowest of the low, and the tears of the elderly will haunt them till the end of days. Children shun the responsibility of taking care of their own parents who may have become weak or disabled. The same parents who cleaned them as children, they now scorn and regard as burdens.
There is no excuse, no line of reasoning that can be used to justify the total lack of respect, and abuse, that are being perpetrated against our elderly. As per the ethos of our country, everyone is happy to talk about the neighbour and how they treat their elderly while the ones in their own houses are left without care or supervision. Our elderly suffer not only from conditions related to age and lifestyle but are also susceptible to mental conditions— still a taboo topic in our culture. The painful disease known as Alzheimer's is affecting many of our elderly who sometimes, on a daily basis, have to cry and grieve all over again when told their loved ones are dead. This scary disease is not yet big on our medical radar, but it is killing our elderly.
To their great distress, the elderly are often placed in retirement homes because their children have no time for the people who brought them into the world and cared for them. They are placed into homes, some of which are nothing short of torture chambers designed to end their lives.
I make no qualms to emphatically state that because old age homes are not regulated, the State has a big part to play in institutionalised murder. Yes, murder. These homes that should be staffed by doctors and trained geriatric nurses are instead run by private entrepreneurs who are seeking to make a profit on pensioners and cut as much cost as possible. They are bathing the elderly with hoses out in an open yard, feeding them food not fit for dogs and medicating them on aspirin and Panadol only.
This is indeed a shame, and it is high time that some draconian measures be employed to afford the elderly the dignity they deserve. Firstly, all retirement homes should be medical facilities and be regulated by the State. The State should also follow the lead of the Canadian government and have some form of state system of retirement homes that can be funded by the same pension funds. Thus, there is no increase in cost.
The final and most important, however, is something no law can change. It is for our nation to regain our lost respect and love for the elderly. We need to remember that they are the reason why we are here, and though some may have become feeble or ill with age, they are still people. They are still as valuable as we are, and how we treat them is a window into how we will be treated when we are old. It's time for us to wake up and treat with our elderly. Until then, the following statement will continue to shame us: One parent can look after a dozen children, but a dozen children cannot look after one parent.
—Rajiv Gopie won the President's Medal in 2006 for business/modern studies. He is an MSc candidate in international relations at the London School of Economics.

this article has been taken from
http://www.trinidadexpress.com/commentaries/Neglecting_the_elderly-125614963.html