Abstract

Taiwan has actively promoted the concept of "successful aging" in recent years. The Executive Yuan drafted the White Paper for Aged Society, which set the primary goal to enable seniors to deal with daily life more independently. Although ‘third places’ enable seniors to live independently, the third places that Taiwanese seniors like are not well understood. Consequently, by investigating third places, this study will investigate the environment of achieving successful aging and happiness among seniors. This study uses the questionnaire survey, and the data of this study were collected from October to November 2018 in Taichung City Central District. A questionnaire survey was conducted in several administrative agencies and participants were selected by random sampling among the over-55-year-old citizens who were already retired. An estimate of 90% confidence limits with 5% marginal error gave us a sample size of 257. This study finally received 200 efficient samples. The women’s top five choices of third places are the traditional market, supermarket, restaurant, daily necessities shop, and coffee shop. The men’s top five choices of third places are the traditional market, supermarket, daily necessities shop, restaurant, and a friend’s house. For seniors familiar with the concept of third places, the more often they go to third places, the higher happiness they achieve. This result investigates the importance of having awareness of third places for seniors. Therefore, we should encourage them to go to third places and engage in social activities frequently to achieve successful aging.

Highlights

  • The proportion of a society’s population that is comprised of persons aged 65 or older is called the “aging rate”

  • According to the Third Place Theory proposed by sociologist Ray Oldenburg [7], the purpose of this study is to investigate the third places to which seniors nowadays in Taiwan would usually go and determine the importance of third places with respect to the levels of happiness

  • It was concluded that there is no significant difference in mean awareness of third places and frequency of visits with the mean of happiness

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Summary

Introduction

The proportion of a society’s population that is comprised of persons aged 65 or older is called the “aging rate”. If a society’s aging rate exceeds 7%, it is an aging society; if the rate surpasses 14%, it is an aged society; and if it exceeds 20%, it is a super-aged society. Taiwan entered the stage of aging society in 1993, and aged society in 2018. It is predicted to become a super-aged society in 2026, which would mean it took just eight years to go from an aged society to a super-aged society. In 2065, there will be about four persons aged 65 or older for every 10 persons, and one person aged 85 in these four persons [1]. With the transformation of population structure, the "seniors" have become the most imperative issue in the world

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