Thursday, October 04, 2012

OLD AGE- A SOCIAL ISSUE



In traditional Chinese and other Asian cultures the aged were highly respected and cared for. The Igabo tribesmen of Eastern Nigeria value dependency in their aged and involve them in care of children and the administration of tribal affairs. The hallmark of Indian culture is our respectful attitude towards our elders, and the practice of more than one generation living together. Our parents are the ones who have brought us up and made us what we are. At least out of consideration for that much, we should be good and kind towards them. But Younger generations no longer assign status to the aged and their abandonment is always in danger of becoming the social norm. There has been a tendency to subject the aged to domestic violence, subject them to cruelity , to remove the aged from their homes and put them  in custodial care.
A man's life is normally divided into five main stages namely infancy, childhood, adolescence, adulthood and old age. In each of these stages an individual has to find himself in different situations and face different problems. The old age is not without problems. In old age physical strength deteriorates, mental stability diminishes; money power becomes bleak coupled with negligence from the younger generation. After a certain age health problems begin to crop up leading to losing control over one's body, even not recognizing own family owing to Alzheimer are common in old age. It is then children began to see their parents as burden. It is these parents who at times wander out of their homes or are thrown out, penniless and homeless  to depend on charity. Some dump their old parents or grand parents in old-age homes and don't even come to visit them anymore. The state of the widows of Vrindavan – with nowhere to go and their own family having cast them out, is an example of the outcome; they earn a meager living by devotional singing or, if they cannot sing, by begging. In many cases they are thrown out by their families after their property has been taken over, or they are rejected for not having any property or other assets that the family can use. In many cases, it has been seen  that parents abandoned by their children at railway stations and out-patient departments of hospitals. In many cases even when the parents die, the children say they cannot perform the last rites, and he himself has performed the last rites for many old people. In rare cases, we find the tradition of  thalaikoothal, in Tamil Nadu which  involves giving the old person an oil bath early in the morning and making them drink a lot of tender coconut water, which results in renal failure, high fever and death in a day or two.           According to NGOs incidences of elderly couples being forced to sell their houses are very high. Some elderly people have also complained that in case of a property dispute they feel more helpless when their wives side with their children. Many of them suffer in silence as they fear humiliation or are too scared to speak up. According to them a phenomenon called 'grand dumping' is becoming common in urban areas these days as children are being increasingly intolerant of their parents' health problems.
The old persons have many problems Physiological, and those relating to Safety, Belonging, love, identification;  Esteem: Achievement, prestige, success, self respect; and Self actualisation: Expressing one's interests and talents to the full. Social aging follows a well defined pattern of   Disengagements-
1. Change in role. Change in occupation and productivity. Possibly change in attitude to work.
2. Loss of role, e.g. retirement or death of a husband.
3. Reduced social interaction. With loss of role social interactions are diminished, eccentric adjustment can further reduce social interaction, damage to self concept, depression.
4. Awareness of scarcity of remaining time. This produces further curtailment of activity in interest of saving time
The twenty-first century is often called the age of ageing. Since 1950, the proportion of the world.s
population aged 60 and over has changed from one in thirteen to one in ten, with some developingcountries ageing faster than developed countries. These demographic trends which every country is undergoing are having significant social, economic and political effects on society and on its institutions such as the family, the labour force, social and health services, etc. The impact of the world.s ageing population growth on the socio-economic policies and the culture of societies is already presenting difficulties to governments. Moreover, as a result of the radical social and cultural changes that are taking place throughout the world in recent years, such as industrialisation, urbanisation and modernisation, the stability of society has been shaken in many countries and the scale of values altered. Furthermore, traditional approaches which used to meet the needs of the older citizens are undergoing change. Population ageing poses unique challenges to every society. Unlike other population variables, such as fertility and mortality, which to a considerable extent can be influenced by government policies and interventions, the process of population ageing is neither amenable to change nor easily modified. Consequently, the attention of every government is to be aimed not on whether it can change the basic process of population ageing, but rather to the very issues that arise from this process. A very important  consequence of population ageing is the ethical issues which arise from such a phenomenon. A lot has been said and written on the rights of older persons. The Indian Laws provide  following  Rights of the ElderlyPersons-
·         Parents cannot be evicted from a house without due process of law if they have been staying there from before.There is three enactments that can be applied.
·         Under section 125 of the CrPC,a magistrate can order a child to maintain his old parents under the Maintenance of Parents Act.
·         The Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act say an aged parent can demand maintenance from children in the same way that a wife can demand it from her husband.
·         The Domestic Violence Act too provides parents with the right to seek relief from any kind of abuse.

The aged share with the young the same needs: However, the aged often have fewer or weaker resources to meet those needs. Their disengagement is not an inevitable process. The needs of the old are essentially the same as in middle age and the activities of middle age should be extended as long as possible. The decrease in social interaction of the aged is often largely the result of society withdrawing from the individual as much as the reverse. To combat this  the individual must vigorously resist the limitations of his social world.Their need for social interaction may be ignored by family and care workers. Family should make time to visit their aged members and invite them to their homes. The aged like to visit children and relate to them through games and stories. Meaningful relationships can be developed via foster-grandparent programs. Some aged are not aware of their income and health entitlements. Family and friends should take the time to explain these. Some aged are too proud to access their entitlements and this problem should be addressed in a kindly way where it occurs. It is best that the aged be allowed as much choice as possible in matters related to living arrangements, social life and lifestyle. Communities serving the aged need to provide for the aged via such things as lower curbing, and ramps.
Carers need to examine their own attitude to aging and dying. Denial in the carer is detected by the aged person and it can inhibit the aged person from expressing negative feelings - fear, anger. If the person can express these feelings to someone then that person is less likely to die with a sense of isolation and bitterness.
        In India, a National Policy on older persons was announced in January 1999 which identified a number of areas of intervention-financial security, healthcare and nutrition, shelter, education, welfare, protection of life and property for the wellbeing of older persons in the country.A National Council for Older Persons (NCOP) was constituted by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment to operationalize the National Policy on older persons.

To Conclude, Respect for older persons has always been thought to be a common heritage of mankind. However, the grounds and forms of such respect tend to change according to place and time. Until recently, older persons were considered as the richest storehouses of knowledge. Rapid changes in technology and the spread of schooling have produced as one result, the deposition of older persons from their status as the repositories of total wisdom. Ethics requires that human relations, even between generations, go beyond strict justice, in the sense of giving everyone his due, and express their  awareness of the unity of mankind in concrete ways. Older persons should not only mete out to themselves or receive from family, society and international humanitarian institutions, just the means of subsistence, but also be enabled to exercise generosity and show magnanimity. Older persons are morally obliged to keep making the most productive use of their talents not only out of self-interest but also as their personal contribution to the common good of mankind. To do so, they must be given the necessary space at family, social and international levels. On the one hand, older persons should assume responsibility for their own future not only for their own sakes, but also as an act of solidarity with the whole human community. Correlatively, for such an exercise to be possible, the intelligent collaboration of the State and of Civil Society with older persons themselves is necessary. These particular obligations both of and towards older persons stem from the fact that all human beings share responsibility for the well-being of all other human beings wherever they may be, both now and in the future.



Pragyan Pandey,
MSME,
2nd Year

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