Workshop on Healthy Ageing and Adult Caregiving

Event



Workshop on Healthy Ageing and Adult Caregiving

Oct 25, 2023 - Oct 26, 2023 (All Day) | Online

Event/Talk title
Co-sponsored by
Co-organised by the Ageing and Health Incentives Lab (AHIL) at LSE & the Population Aging Research Center (PARC) at UPenn
Series
Name
Co-Director, Population Aging Research Center, Director, PEDAL Lab, Associate Professor, Medical Ethics & Health Policy, Perelman School of Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Name
Co-Director, Population Aging Research Center, Frederick J. Warren Professor of Demography Professor of Sociology
University of Pennsylvania
Description

We are pleased to invite submissions for a Workshop on Healthy Ageing and Caregiving, examining questions on the economics, demography and policy in high-, middle- and low-income settings.

Population ageing is profoundly transforming societies across the globe, implying growing -- and often unmet -- demands for caregiving for older persons through families, communities, and private and governmental institutions. Yet tremendous variation exists in how families, societies and governments have responded to this challenge, within high-income countries and across the socioeconomic development spectrum. Challenges for societies range from facilitating healthy ageing, thereby allowing individuals to live productive and independent lives until advanced ages, to understanding the financial and wellbeing consequences of population ageing and creating sustainable social support systems for a growing older population. Covid-19 has highlighted the additional strains that an unexpected rise of infectious diseases can provide for caregiving systems in ageing societies, and a growing body of comparative research has highlighted the diverse trajectories of individual and population ageing in high-, middle and low-income countries and the complexity of the required health systems and social responses to population ageing across the globe.

 This workshop will focus on the intersection between healthy ageing and caregiving, including discussions of the effects of (un)healthy ageing on later life behaviours, intergenerational interactions, labour markets, family caregiving, non-family support for older persons, as well as health, household and financial decisions of care at old age.

Research from high-, middle- and low-income contexts is suitable, as are comparative caregiving studies across ageing societies.