Abstract

BackgroundAs the demographic profile of the UK changes, policy makers and practitioners have to respond to health challenges presented by a progressively ageing population. The health promotion plan for older people, aged over 50 years, in Wales included eight key areas: physical activity, healthy eating, home safety and warmth, emotional health, health protection, smoking, alcohol and sexual health. The aim of this study was to describe the extent, content and regional variation of existing health promotion initiatives for older people in Wales, provided by statutory, voluntary and private sector agencies.MethodA questionnaire was sent to senior health promotion specialists employed in the 22 local authority areas in Wales to ascertain details of all projects promoting health and wellbeing in the eight key areas where the priority population was aged over 50, or the majority of users were older people. Additional information was sought from project leads and websites.ResultsEighteen questionnaires were returned; not all were fully completed. Four areas did not return a questionnaire. Additional information was obtained from internet searches but this mainly concerned national initiatives rather than local projects. In all, 120 projects were included, 11 were throughout Wales. Best provision was for physical activity, with 3 national and 42 local initiatives, but local provision was patchy. Healthy eating, and home safety and warmth had far fewer initiatives, as did health protection, which comprised two national immunisation campaigns. Smoking and alcohol misuse were poorly provided for, and there was no provision for older people's sexual health. Evaluation arrangements were poorly described. Half of those who responded identified unmet training needs.ConclusionThe reasons for patchy provision of services were not clear. Increased efforts to improve the coverage of interventions known to be effective should be made. Rigorous evaluation of projects is needed to ascertain the most effective and appropriate interventions, especially for alcohol misuse and sexual health. These conclusions are relevant to the other countries of the United Kingdom (UK), and more widely across Europe.

Highlights

  • As the demographic profile of the United Kingdom (UK) changes, policy makers and practitioners have to respond to health challenges presented by a progressively ageing population

  • Best provision was for physical activity, with 3 national and 42 local initiatives, but local provision was patchy

  • Smoking and alcohol misuse were poorly provided for, and there was no provision for older people's sexual health

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Summary

Introduction

As the demographic profile of the UK changes, policy makers and practitioners have to respond to health challenges presented by a progressively ageing population. The health promotion plan for older people, aged over 50 years, in Wales included eight key areas: physical activity, healthy eating, home safety and warmth, emotional health, health protection, smoking, alcohol and sexual health. The report, 'Healthy Ageing: a Challenge for Europe' [3], aimed at policy makers and practitioners in European Union (EU) member states, identified the following priority topics for health promotion: retirement and pre-retirement, social capital, mental health, environment, nutrition, physical activity, injury prevention, substance use/misuse (including smoking and alcohol), medication and associated problems, and preventive health services. The first three priorities are included in the area of emotional health; environment and injury prevention partly overlap with home safety and warmth; medication is not included, and there is an additional priority topic, sexual health.

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