Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Issues That The Elderly In Australia Deal With Daily

By Bruce Jopples


The elderly in Australia need better care. Once the age of sixty five has been reached, the likelihood of being able to live out a full and satisfying life has become increasingly difficult. Even when one's health is not an issue, the impossible system has set up the aging to be an offset of society.

The government does not supply a reasonable amount of funds for those who simply can not afford retirement. The tight budget that seniors are faced to live on is virtually impossible to manage. As the cost of living and medications continues to rise, the aging public will continue to face great peril.

Nursing homes are typically an option for those who do not have enough money to hire the help they need. Unfortunately, nursing homes that fit their ability to pay are also terrible fraught with abuse and neglect. Since the individuals that are victims of the situation do not have anywhere else to go, reporting their caretakers puts them in a compromised position. Most events go unreported and are discovered later.

Reforming the system that suppresses the rights of the aging is essential. It can not wait and it can not be overlooked any longer. Affording an independent life is becoming harder, which places people in long term hospital care while waiting for a nursing home bed. Not all of the population is able to receive help from services because of cost or location.

There are many individuals who are able to function on their own but are not financially capable of doing so. Once personal freedom is turned over to the nursing homes, depression and neglect exacerbate any existing illnesses. Any existing illnesses can become increasingly worse and premature death is likely.

Those who can afford to live independently are becoming the minority. These are individuals that were able to save, invest, and earn enough in their working life to maintain a reasonable lifestyle after their retirement. Getting help with some of their needs is often difficult, especially for those in farther removed locations.

The elderly in Australia need to have better advocacy and better living arrangements if they can not care for themselves. Those who are able to provide the care they need for themselves but are unable to live on the limited amount offered by the government are at the most risk. It is time to consider the treatment of the aging population to be a mark on the goodness of society and make the appropriate changes.




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