Title: Epidemiology of Aging in Canada
1Epidemiology of Aging in Canada
John Puxty, Queens University puxtyj_at_post.queensu.
ca
2One in Seven Canadians soon to be One in Four
3Proportion of Population Worldwide Over 65 Years
of Age
4Demographic Pressures in 1990s
5- Aging Demographics in Canada 1991-2041
of Total Population
6Why do we have an Aging Population?
- Increased Life Expectancy
7Why do we have an Aging Population?
- Increased Life Expectancy
- Reduced birth rate now
- Aging of baby boomers
8Population Age Distribution
9Why do we have an Aging Population?
- Increased Life Expectancy
- Reduced birth rate now
- Aging of baby boomers
- Reduced immigration rate
- Immigration has been major cause of population
growth. Approximately 3 of immigrant in 1996
were seniors
10Distribution of Elderly in 2001
11The Elderly within Canada in 2001
- 75 of all seniors live in Ontario, Quebec, and
British Columbia - Only 17 of seniors found in rural areas (c.f.
25 of those between 55-64 years old) - In 1996 only 3.5 of Aboriginals were seniors but
expected to triple by 2016
12Distribution of Elderly in 2021
13The Elderly and Housing in 2001
- 93 live in private households. Of these 2/3 live
with family. Only 14 men live alone compared to
34 of women. - Most live in single-detached houses (61). Next
most common is apartments (28). - In 1991 6.4 (203,695) of seniors lived in
institutions (c.f. 8 in 1981)
14The Elderly and Finance
15The Elderly and Finance
Distribution of after-tax expenditures of
seniors, 1999
16Pensions and the Elderly (2002)
- OAS/GIS and CPP/QPP account gt50 income
17Canadian Pensions 2004
- OAS/GIS and CPP/QPP account gt50 income
- Rates are adjusted quarterly based on CPI)
18The Elderly and Finance 2001
- Average income of Canadian seniors is 21,000 per
year - Average income of men (24,500) falls with age -
27,500 for 65-69 falling to 18,700 for 85
group - Little change in income of women (15,300) with
age - Between 1980-1999 couples with low income fell
from 13 to 4
19The Elderly and Finance 2001
20The Elderly and Finance 2001
- Average income of Canadian seniors is 21,000 per
year - Average income of men (24,500) falls with age -
27,500 for 65-69 falling to 18,700 for 85
group - Little change in income of women (15,300) with
age - Between 1980-1999 couples with low income fell
from 13 to 4 - Certain sub-groups have much higher poverty
levels eg. Very old, women, immigrants
21The Elderly as a Resource 2001
- 1996 40 seniors had high-school or post-
secondary education. However, 40 handicapped by
deficiency in literacy skills - 1997 23 seniors provided volunteer services.
Value of such services estimated in excess 5.5
billion! - 1981 seniors contributed on average 803 to
charity compared to 549 all Canadian tax payers
22The Elderly as a Resource 2001
Average hours per week volunteers spend on those
activities, by age, 2000
23Reasons for Retirement
- Compulsory 29 men and 11 women
- Health issues 34 men and 38 women
- Job loss 7 men and 4 women
- Other includes large early retirement group
(physical or psychologically demanding
occupations, professionals)
24Retirement
25Preferences and Retirement
- 40 of retired people would have preferred a
transition - Older Canadians tend to work if occupations allow
flexibility 70 farm workers work beyond 65,
higher education is also factor. However health
and financial factors important - Second career increasingly relevant
26Functional Problems and Age
27Sources of Care-giving
28Sandwich Generation
29Sandwich Generation
- Almost 3 in 10 of those aged 45 to 64 in 2002,
with unmarried children under 25 in the home,
(712,000Â individuals) were also caring for a
senior - 80 report impact on ability to work
- Women were more likely than men to be sandwiched.
On average, women spent 29 hours a month
providing care to seniors, compared to
just 13 hours spent by their male counterparts
30Aging and Care-giving
- 18 of those over 65 have no living offspring
- Nearly 20 have family living more than 90
minutes away by car - Extremely old have old relatives
- Seniors are often caregivers themselves!
- Majority of seniors elect for LTC vs living with
family
31Aging and Health
32Aging and Health
33Aging and Health