Making old age better is possible — and necessary - FT中文網
登錄×
電子郵件/用戶名
密碼
記住我
請輸入郵箱和密碼進行綁定操作:
請輸入手機號碼,透過簡訊驗證(目前僅支援中國大陸地區的手機號):
請您閱讀我們的用戶註冊協議私隱權保護政策,點擊下方按鈕即視爲您接受。
FT商學院

Making old age better is possible — and necessary

The UK government needs to look abroad for inspiration

The writer is a Research Fellow at the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business & Government, Harvard University, and author of ‘Extra Time: Ten Lessons for Living Longer Better’

In Japan, I’ve watched a humanoid robot dance with a human physio, leading enthusiastic elderly people in a morning exercise routine. In Holland, I’ve visited old ladies in their homes with a nurse who brings her dog to cheer them up. In America, I’ve been to a care home where the residents run the library — whose shelves display books they’ve written themselves. As every rich country grapples with growing numbers of people living longer, getting frail or being crippled by loneliness, an important part of the answer lies in keeping people independent for as long as possible. 

A care system which promises us all more meaning in old age would be far more attractive than one which sounds like a last resort to manage decline. In the UK, the debate about social care has taken off again, with chancellor Rachel Reeves ditching a long-delayed plan to “cap” certain care costs. This has alarmed those who feared the cap was the only game in town. But Reeves’s instinct is right.

To fix social care requires bigger thinking, about both funding and the approach to those with disabilities. The only way to untangle what currently feels like a monstrous Gordian knot — with underpaid care workers, desperate families, GP shortages and clogged hospitals — is to change the narrative. Elderly social care should be framed as a positive investment for the whole of society.

In a working paper I have published with associates at Harvard’s Kennedy School, we recommend a series of practical policies to improve outcomes for people over 65 in both health and care. Unnecessary or prolonged hospital stays, for example, can condemn people to become dependent on others too early because of bad food, disturbed sleep and physical deconditioning. Intensive rehabilitation can pay for itself — it has enabled two-thirds of people in some American hospitals to return home after a fall or operation. But it requires staff to change from a mindset of “doing to”, to “doing with”.

Similarly, loneliness is not always cured by shunting people off to a day centre. In Norway, campaigners are using peer-to-peer technology to get elderly people sharing meals online. There is a widespread assumption that older people don’t want choice or control. But they do — and more should be allowed to spend their own allocated care budget and employ relatives, as Germany is doing. 

Above all, we argue that the UK needs a coherent funding system to replace one which is opaque, arbitrary and unfair. In care homes, families with assets are effectively cross-subsiding those eligible for state help. NHS Continuing Health Care budgets are the subject of court cases from people desperately battling to prove a “primary health need”, of which there is no strict legal definition.

In some ways, the UK’s system looks not dissimilar to Germany’s 30 years ago. Both Germany and Japan have gone on to craft social care insurance funds which are transparent, predictable and sustainable, and have created a sense of social solidarity. Everyone pays in — including pensioners — and everyone benefits.

These schemes go far beyond the cap on care costs proposed in 2011, which Reeves has just stopped. The worthy aim was to set a maximum amount that anyone would have to pay for their personal care over their lifetime (excluding daily living costs). But politicians never implemented it, partly because it would protect relatively few families, and partly because the Treasury has been reluctant to raise taxes without any commensurate improvement in quality of care.

One political challenge in countries with “pay as you go” welfare systems is the belief among many older people that they have paid enough tax to cover their costs in old age (sadly, many haven’t). Another sticking point, especially in the UK, is housing. The desire to pass on a home to the next generation is strong and legitimate, and has led successive politicians to promise that no one should have to sell their home to pay for care — but it may not be sustainable to ignore the value of most people’s largest asset when assessing their wealth. 

Labour will have to find more funding, not least because it risks bankrupting employers with its pledge to raise care staff wages. But reform is not simply a dry technical exercise: it must bring the public with it. That means setting out a vision for a better old age which can give people meaning — as Atul Gawande argued so powerfully in his book Being Mortal. How we treat our elderly and disabled is the ultimate test of a civilised society.

camilla.cavendish@ft.com

版權聲明:本文版權歸FT中文網所有,未經允許任何單位或個人不得轉載,複製或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵權必究。

鋪設中國太陽能板的熱潮威脅巴基斯坦負債累累的電網

電價飆升促使巴基斯坦企業爭相在工廠屋頂鋪設超低價的中國太陽能板。

針對川普的明顯暗殺企圖:到目前爲止我們知道什麼?

嫌疑人被捕引發了人們對美國總統選舉最後階段候選人安全的擔憂。

技術能源正在重塑世界

擁有化石燃料儲備的傳統權力掮客將看到他們的全球影響力減弱。

是時候讓新興市場這個品牌退役了

需要圍繞新興市場指數進行創新,並制定更多主題基準。

普華永道中國1.4億美元園區停工,恆大危機影響加劇

熱帶島嶼上的奢侈培訓機構正在接受審查,因爲該公司因對失敗的房地產開發商的審計而受到影響。

Netflix如何贏得串流媒體大戰

自2022年「大調整」以來,該公司已經實現了顯著復甦,現在比好萊塢競爭對手更有優勢。
設置字型大小×
最小
較小
默認
較大
最大
分享×