Vancouver Foundation Report on Social Connectedness

The Vancouver Foundation has released a report on a survey it conducted earlier this year.

They polled 3,841 people across metro Vancouver to measure their connections and engagement. They explored people's connections to their friends, their neighbours, and to the community-at-large. They looked at their engagement in neighbourhood and community life, and what prevents them from being more connected and engaged.

Please take some time to read this report because we feel that it has some important implications for older adults living in Vancouver.

Posted in Conferences, Social Connectedness | Comments Off on Vancouver Foundation Report on Social Connectedness

BC Seniors Advocate

The Province of British Columbia has been soliciting feedback from interested parties about a position being proposed for a provincial Seniors Advocate. The Seniors Advisory Committee has strongly supported to creation of this position.

Please take a look at this website and read the discussion paper that outlines the concepts and options for consideration. There is a Summary presenting key information in two pages, for those that may not have time to review the entire paper.

http://www.seniorsbc.ca/action_plan/seniors_advocate.html

Posted in Government | Comments Off on BC Seniors Advocate

TaxiSaver Program Saved

The City of Vancouver’s Persons with Disabilities Committee, in partnership with the Seniors Advisory Committee, worked hard to get TransLink to reverse its decision to eliminate the TaxiSaver program–a program on which many older adults rely to remain independent.

Take a look at this video clip for more info on this important victory.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/07/11/bc-taxisaver-translink.html

Posted in Mobility, Transportation | Comments Off on TaxiSaver Program Saved

Healthy City Strategy

Today I attended the first-ever Healthy People, Healthy City conference, sponsored by the City of Vancouver in partnership with Vancouver Coastal Health.

The Healthy City Program is an initiative of the World Health Organization (WHO) that defines a healthy city as "one that is continually creating and improving those physical and social environments and expanding those community resources which enable people to mutually support each other in performing all the functions of life and in developing to their maximum potential."

The primary focus of the gathering was to gain a better understanding of the relationship between urban environments and the health of its citizens. Mayor Gregor Robertson opened the conference. Dr. Patricia Daly, Chef Medical Health Officer for Vancouver Coastal Health, spoke, and City Councillors Adriane Carr and Dr. Kerry Jang were in attendance.

I am in full agreement with Andre Picard, the Globe & Mail’s public health reporter and acclaimed author who, in his keynote address, said that we all need to lead a healthy lifestyle and be responsible for our own health and not merely insist that the healthcare system make us healthy. This requires repositioning the healthcare system from “sickness-centered” to “health-centered”. In a word, prevention. This means embracing risk-taking and innovation, and not accepting mediocrity as a Canadian value.

The numerous presentations dealt with socioeconomic issues affecting the health of Vancouverites, including income inequality, confusing equality with equity, revising “universal” policies, and using a targeted approach when appropriate and justified. We also need to develop a new social contract that supports healthy people living in a healthy city, where spending on safe sidewalks and living in affordable housing becomes a priority. This requires us to treat city planners and engineers as public health officials and adopt ideas such as bikeways and transit, backyard food gardens, safe public places, and embracing harm-reduction strategies.

Change is up to us at a community level, and sometimes at a Provincial or Federal level, but it is still up to us. It is fine to “make people uncomfortable” when challenging them to do better. According to Dr. Penny Ballem, Vancouver's City Manager, “We all have to do better.”

For more information on Vancouver’s Healthy City strategy, visit http://vancouver.ca/healthycity/

This posting has been excerpted with permission from the Patient Voices Network. The opinions are those of the author, Ms. Wadolna, and do not necessarily reflect those of the Seniors Advisory Committee.

Posted in Health | Comments Off on Healthy City Strategy