Free, government-run home care service will be available to poor
people over the age of 60 this year.
The service was previously only available to people over the age
of 80, but the government has expanded the program after a number
of seniors living on their own suffered accidents in the
municipality.
An estimated 100,000 elderly people will be eligible for the
service under the new rules.
The municipality began offering home care service, including
providing meals and clean, in 2004.
Over the past three months, three seniors were found dead in
their own homes following accidents. They all lived alone and
seldom had visitors.
Cai Huixian, 70, fell from the balcony of her apartment on the
10th floor of a residential building on Xinjian Road in Hongkou
District on February 15. She died instantly. Cai wasn't old enough
for the home care service.
"Local communities and the children of seniors living alone
should learn a lesson from these deaths and give more care to those
elders," said Sun Pengbiao of the Shanghai Committee for the
Aged.
Anyone of the age of 60 can now apply for the service at their
neighborhood committee, which will choose qualified applicants
based on their financial and physical situation, according to the
Shanghai Civil Affairs Bureau.
The municipality will also install 20,000 alarm systems for free
in the homes of elderly people living alone this year. The systems
will be connected to the city's service center for the old, the
Shanghai Sunshine Service Center, which was founded in 2001. In the
event of an emergency, users can push a button which will send an
alarm to the center.
"By the end of 2006, we will have about 60,000 users in total,"
said Wang Hui, an engineer at the center. "The new ones will be
installed this month."
So far the municipality hosts 474 seniors' homes, holding around
50,000 beds, said Shen Yan of the Shanghai Committee for the Aged.
There are around 160,000 seniors who live alone.
(Shanghai Daily March 7, 2006)