Key Points

WHO South-East Asia member states have united to adopt the Colombo Declaration focused on healthy ageing through strengthened primary healthcare. The declaration comes as the region faces a dramatic demographic shift with its elderly population expected to double by 2050. This framework emphasizes combating ageism while ensuring accessible, integrated care services for older individuals. The commitment reflects a comprehensive approach to maintaining dignity and purpose for ageing populations across the region.

Key Points: WHO South-East Asia Adopts Colombo Declaration for Healthy Ageing

  • Member States adopt framework to embed healthy ageing in national policies and primary healthcare systems
  • Declaration calls for combating ageism through laws and intergenerational initiatives
  • Region's population aged 60+ projected to double from 11.3% to 20.9% by 2050
  • Strengthening geriatric competencies and supporting paid/unpaid caregivers across communities
  • Prioritizing adequate resource allocation through innovative financing mechanisms
  • Integrated person-centered care tailored to older persons' needs and preferences
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WHO South-East Asia nations adopt Colombo declaration to support healthy ageing

WHO South-East Asia nations commit to healthy ageing policies as region's elderly population set to double by 2050 through strengthened primary healthcare systems.

"Older people, when in good health and with functional ability, are vital assets and continue to enrich families, communities, societies and economies. - Catharina Boehme, WHO South-East Asia"

Colombo, October 14

The Member States of the WHO South-East Asia Region on Tuesday adopted the Colombo Declaration on 'Healthy ageing through strengthened primary health care, aimed at the health and well-being of its ageing population, which is expected to double by 2050.

Speaking at a ministerial roundtable during the ongoing 78th Regional Committee session, Catharina Boehme, Officer-in-Charge for WHO South-East Asia, emphasised the importance of older people as valuable contributors to families, communities, and economies when they remain healthy and functional.

"Older people, when in good health and with functional ability, are vital assets and continue to enrich families, communities, societies and economies. Primary health care is the most inclusive, effective, and efficient pathway to achieve universal health coverage, ensuring that older people can live long, healthy, productive and meaningful lives," said Boehme.

The Ministers of Health and other senior representatives of the Member States, along with WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and regional experts, participated in the ministerial roundtable.

The Colombo Declaration calls for embedding healthy ageing in national policies and PHC-oriented health systems, ensuring accessible, equitable, integrated and age-responsive services across the continuum of care, from health promotion and prevention to rehabilitation, long-term care and palliative care.

"The Ministerial Declaration is a framework for concrete action, aligned closely with the Regional Strategy for Healthy Ageing 2024-2030, which identifies four priority areas -combating ageism, fostering enabling environments, delivering integrated person-centred care, and ensuring access to long-term care. Together, these form a comprehensive foundation on which Member States can strengthen and build policies and programmes that effectively respond to the realities of ageing," she said.

The Declaration emphasises strengthening the health and care workforce by building geriatric and gender sensitive competencies, supporting paid and unpaid caregivers, and enabling multidisciplinary, community-based teams to deliver quality health and well-being care and services to older people at all stages.

It calls for prioritising adequate resource allocation for policies and programs for older people by exploring innovative financing, public-private partnerships, and cross-ministerial cost-sharing mechanisms to support financial protection and universal coverage.

"Lasting progress will depend on increased domestic investment. Healthy ageing must be embedded in national budgets, health plans, and social protection systems," Boehme said, adding, "Broader partnerships are essential. Development banks, civil society, the private sector, academic institutions, and philanthropies have vital roles to play in mobilising resources, driving innovation, and scaling solutions."

The Colombo Declaration calls for integrated, right-based, person-centred and gender sensitive care for older persons tailored to their needs, preferences, and choices; strengthening data systems to inform, monitor and recalibrate programs; and harnessing digital health innovations to improve access, efficiency, and quality of care.

Adopting the Declaration, the Member States committed to combat ageism through laws, inclusive policies, public sensitisation and education, and intergenerational initiatives that challenge stereotypes and discrimination, while fostering respect, dignity and solidarity between generations.

The WHO South-East Asia Region is witnessing a rapid demographic shift. With Member States' collective achievements in extending life expectancy and expanding health-care access and well-being initiatives, the population aged 60 years and above is projected to nearly double from 11.3 per cent in 2024 to 20.9 per cent in 2050.

The Ministerial Round Table was preceded by a 'Participatory Dialogue' on 12 October with older people, caregivers and representatives from communities from across the Region. Recommendations from the dialogue have been embedded in the declaration to ensure that the lived realities of older people are reflected in commitments made in the declaration. "Their testimonies powerfully underscored that ageing is not merely about adding years to life, but about adding life to years--about dignity, purpose, and inclusion," Catharina Boehme said.

"Let us move forward with shared purpose. Together, we can build inclusive, resilient, and sustainable health and care systems--systems that uphold dignity, ensure security, and provide purpose to older persons for generations to come," she said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh Q
Good declaration but implementation is key. We've seen many such policies fail at ground level in India. Need proper budget allocation and monitoring systems. Hope this isn't just another paper exercise.
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Sarah B
As someone working in healthcare, I appreciate the focus on combating ageism. Elderly patients often face discrimination in hospitals. The integrated care approach mentioned here could really transform geriatric care in our region.
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Arjun K
Digital health innovations could be a game-changer for elderly care in rural India! Many seniors can't travel long distances for medical check-ups. Telemedicine and mobile health units would make a huge difference. 🇮🇳
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Meera T
The statistic about aging population doubling by 2050 is alarming. We need to start building infrastructure NOW. Our elders deserve dignity and proper care in their golden years. This declaration gives me hope! 🙏
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Vikram M
I'm glad they included unpaid caregivers in the discussion. In Indian families, daughters and daughters-in-law often bear the burden of elderly care without any support. Recognition and support for them is long overdue.

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