(5C) Is Hong Kong an age-friendly city?

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(5C) Is Hong Kong an age-friendly city? Door Mind Map: (5C) Is Hong Kong an age-friendly city?

1. No : (

1.1. impolite citizen

1.2. non sufficient elderly monthly allowamces

1.2.1. forces retirees to find working opportunities after retiring age

1.3. The elderly also need to bare expensive medical fee.

1.3.1. these families have run into financial difficulties

1.4. Hong Kong elders face problems of non-inclusion, isolated from general social activities

1.4.1. The city’s experience with the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) epidemic has demonstrated that a rise in unemployment, increased suicides, social isolation, loneliness or alienation can have a significant impact on elderly people.

2. The HK Gov wasnt giving enough support on housing issues

3. A reward can be time credits from volunteer hours that they can exchange for a service, or use to buy products from a social enterprise. But the critical component within the social capital framework is that it co-opts older adults to be co-producers of community development, which leads to inclusiveness, a caring economy and a more equitable society, explains Lu.

4. “This is particularly important because many older people need better support through a SMART system,” he says, citing examples such as technology for rehabilitation, using robotics to solve any manpower problems or even having sufficient hospital beds and equipment to improve the quality of care services provided by institutions.

5. By 2066 one in every 3 elderly will be 85; longer life expectancy

6. Yeung’s team and her collaborators have developed intervention programmes that cover mindfulness, behavioural activation and befriending programmes for reducing loneliness of elderly living alone, which are conducted over the phone so the elderly can stay home and still get support from trained volunteers. Yeung believes this is really the way to go.

7. Yeung’s team and her collaborators have developed intervention programmes that cover mindfulness, behavioural activation and befriending programmes for reducing loneliness of elderly living alone, which are conducted over the phone so the elderly can stay home and still get support from trained volunteers.

8. more than 80 per cent of our elderly have difficulty walking, or require the support of others or the use of assistive equipment to walk. Nearly 85 per cent have one or more chronic diseases, such as high blood pressure and heart disease

9. During the pandemic we had social distancing and many of the elderly had to reduce their typical social participation with family members and friends,” she notes. “They couldn’t go to community centres to attend social activities, classes or workshops.”

10. Another major challenge in building an age-friendly smart city is the use of the technology itself. While there are obvious benefits to being connected and being online, if the technology itself creates barriers, then it could further fuel feelings of loneliness and isolation.

11. Such social protection measures naturally have a bias towards the elderly, and are therefore considered “aged-friendly” but not necessarily beneficial for younger people.

12. a holistic approach

12.1. "Society for all ages"

13. Yes

13.1. Goverment spent considerable resources to cope with existing needs and enhance services for older adults.

13.1.1. Social security payments

13.1.2. public services

13.1.2.1. the HK immigration department provides one stop identity fcard replacement services at elderly homes

13.1.3. Medical services

13.1.3.1. A good public health care system provides affordable and accessible health care services for all.

13.1.4. Old age allowances

13.1.4.1. HSBC employs about 170 retirees who help customers at its retail branches across Hong Kong. These “Smart Seniors” help promote the use of the bank’s community caring corners, where they demonstrate the use of ATMs to elderly customers, in addition to greeting people and directing them to the appropriate service counter.

13.1.5. HK$2 public transport subsidy scheme

13.1.5.1. The popular HK$2 public transport subsidy scheme, for example, is estimated to cost the government another HK$1.2 billion this year. Institutional care support for older adults, meanwhile, is insufficient. What is available is mostly expensive.

13.2. Yes : )

13.2.1. Maybe, because the city itself is old.

13.3. an age-friendly city also provides quality education and green recreation for all ages.

13.3.1. Sounds Great, a social enterprise that worked with celebrities and vocal talents to create an audiobook featuring celebrity autobiographies, Cantonese opera and classics from Chinese literature. The audiobook, which has been donated to charities that help disadvantaged elderly people

13.4. The HK Gov is substantially becoming a "Smart city " in which the facilities in hong kong had combine technology with health care and transportational services.

13.4.1. Teenagers and most adults benefit from the change overtime ,leading to a more comfort and convinient life

13.4.2. On the other side ,as the "leave home safe" is required in the pandemic days , it seems like elderly doesnt have too much problems of technologic issues.

13.4.2.1. The panedemic actually makes more elderlies have exposures to the new age technology, make the problem of technology barriers in other countriesfor elderlies not exist in HongKong

14. The HK gov had provide transportatiion susidy for the elderlies over the past 20 years

15. Their limited knowledge of ICT was one thing, and then there was the issue that many of them don’t even have a smartphone and/or a data plan. Noting that when the LeaveHomeSafe app was introduced, many elderly were completely helpless.

16. And technology can play a huge part in this endeavour. In fact, Lu is an active researcher of the time bank model, a system that encourages older adults to do more volunteering and peer-to-peer interaction with a focus on rewards.

17. If we can develop intervention programmes on technology use that are not just focused on new knowledge acquisition, such as to frame them as learning these skills for having a better opportunity to get updates about their family members and friends, or even their grandchildren, through Facebook or having an Instagram account. This will motivate them more,”

18. On the upside, there are currently many supportive groups, such as the Social Welfare Department and NGOs who have been providing active community care and support services to the elderly. Researchers are also playing a part in developing intervention programmes that help the elderly prepare for a more technologically driven society.

19. Their limited knowledge of ICT was one thing, and then there was the issue that many of them don’t even have a smartphone and/or a data plan,” says Yeung, noting that when the LeaveHomeSafe app was introduced, many elderly were completely helpless. “They were standing outside the wet market trying to get help from people to teach them how to install apps and operate the smartphone,” she notes. “That sort of measure when implemented within society has limited consensus. The government isn’t necessarily aware that the potentially poor technological knowledge of older people—especially among those with lower educational levels, or who live in poverty, or don’t have smartphones—can put them in a helpless situation.”

19.1. During the pandemic, Yeung’s team noted an appreciable rise in elderly people feeling excluded and isolated. For this reason, she feels that there is still a long way to go before Hong Kong can claim to have developed an age-friendly smart city.

20. The lack of ICT knowledge means that many among the elderly do not know how to use the internet or social media to connect with others, while some might not even have a data plan to get access to timely information about COVID-19 restrictions. Added to that, the introduction of the LeaveHomeSafe app also posed many challenges to the elderly in Hong Kong.

21. Use

22. At present Chan is collaborating with CityU’s School of Law on establishing a cross border medical data exchange framework between Hong Kong and Greater Bay Area (GBA) cities. Many elderly people may prefer to stay in the GBA or travel frequently across the region after they retire; Chan thinks a strong digital connection with Hong Kong is essential to improve the continuity of healthcare wherever they are. For example, extending the coverage of the Electronic Health Record Sharing System (eHealth) in Hong Kong to healthcare providers and professionals in the GBA, so that health records can be accessible by healthcare practitioners across the GBA.