Published: 18:11, October 15, 2020 | Updated: 14:26, June 5, 2023
Gender equality key to healthy aging
By Bjorn Andersson

In a relatively short time, COVID-19 has devastated the lives of millions globally. For hundreds of millions more, the toll wrought by the pandemic could have lasting effects for decades.

Perhaps one of the most cunning aspects of this virus is the harm it inflicts on older people who face multiple threats, including being physically more vulnerable, at greater peril of the impacts of social isolation, and at significant risk from the serious and likely long-lasting socioeconomic shocks of the pandemic.

COVID-19 has proved to be acutely dangerous for people with underlying health conditions, ranging from diabetes and asthma to cardiac disease and cancer. A disproportionate death rate is seen among older people in most countries. 

Beyond physical health, the pandemic continues to take a heavy toll on older people — and women in particular — in terms of psychosocial health and economic well-being. 

In the Asia-Pacific region, these impacts are particularly acute, adding to the existing challenges of grappling with accelerating population aging. This region is currently home to over half the world’s population over 60 years of age. 

Globally, the number of older people is expected to surpass 2 billion by 2050. By then, nearly two-thirds of the world’s older people — close to 1.3 billion — will be in the Asia-Pacific region, with one in four people over age 60. 

Women, who generally outlive men, currently constitute the majority — some 54 percent — of older people in the Asia-Pacific, but represent an even greater majority, 61 percent, of the “oldest old” population of 80 years and over.

Even before the COVID-19 crisis, elderly women in a majority of Asia-Pacific countries were facing significant challenges, exacerbated by the fact that many societies are moving from traditional, nuclear family-oriented patterns to far more fluid, fragmented structures. 

The result has been that many older women are more likely to lack family and other socioeconomic support. The majority of older people do not have reliable and sustained access to a caregiver. Many have already slid into poverty during the pandemic or are on the cusp of doing so.

The pandemic has brought into acute focus the urgent need for both governments and civil society to address the complex demographic shift of population aging with strategic solutions and programs. We need a life-cycle approach to healthy aging, with emphasis on girls and women, firmly grounded in gender equality and human rights.

To unpack this, let us consider a woman in her 70s in the small village where she was born and raised.

As with so many of her generation, she was made to marry early, with minimum education. She had children early, pregnancies were unplanned, childbirth was risky. Her husband, many years older, died a long while ago. Her children left the village for the city. This is the scenario many older women now face — with the added risks of COVID-19.

Imagine if, as an adolescent, this woman was able to take that other road: completing school and higher education; achieving gainful employment; marrying as an adult and of her own choice; having healthy children and being able to invest in their well-being; and, ultimately, enjoying a secure old age.

If addressed in a holistic way and underpinned by better policies, more resilient social systems and gender equality, the lives of older people, especially women, can be improved significantly. This would also allow societies to harness the valuable experience and knowledge of older people — reaping a “longevity dividend” from healthy, active older people.

The commitment to advance a better world in an aging society has already been articulated by the 2002 Madrid International Plan of Action on Ageing.

The landmark Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population on Development and the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development underscore the basis of this approach to healthy aging.

As the Asia-Pacific region, with the rest of the world, seeks to “build back better” from the devastating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, let us transform the challenge of population aging into an opportunity. We must translate gender equality and human rights into strategies and approaches that ensure no older woman will be left behind.

Bjorn Andersson is the United Nations Population Fund regional director for Asia and the Pacific. October 1 was the International Day of Older Persons. 

The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.