Department of Anatomy/Te Tari Kikokiko, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Brain Research New Zealand, Centre of Research Excellence, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Gerontologist. 2020 Jul 15;60(5):812-820. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnaa032.
Aotearoa-New Zealand is expecting the number of older adults to double in the next 20 years. Despite publicly funded health and welfare support for older citizens, the aging experience differs across ethnic groups. This creates opportunities and challenges for health and social services to deliver culturally safe and equitable care for all older New Zealanders. Longitudinal and large data sets are pivotal for characterizing the aging experience from birth to advanced age. The New Zealand research funding system responded to predicted demographic changes by increasing funding in order to inform and address key health and well-being issues for older people. In addition, government strategies and policies increasingly focus on social aspects of aging and health inequities and require researchers and organizations to be better connected to end-users. New Zealand needs to continue to fund research that identifies unique and courageous service delivery solutions that result in positive social, financial, psychological, and physical aging for older New Zealanders.
新西兰奥克兰预计在未来 20 年内老年人口数量将翻一番。尽管有公共资金支持老年人的健康和福利,但不同族裔群体的老龄化体验存在差异。这为卫生和社会服务部门为所有新西兰老年人提供文化安全和平等的护理带来了机遇和挑战。纵向和大型数据集对于从出生到老年描述老龄化体验至关重要。新西兰研究资金系统通过增加资金投入来应对预期的人口变化,以为老年人的主要健康和福祉问题提供信息并加以解决。此外,政府战略和政策越来越关注老龄化和健康不平等的社会方面,并要求研究人员和组织与最终用户更好地联系。新西兰需要继续资助那些确定独特和勇敢的服务提供解决方案的研究,这些解决方案为新西兰老年人带来积极的社会、经济、心理和身体健康。