Abstract
In Russia, initiatives for healthy ageing have been growing over the last two decades; however, none use an evidence-based (EB) approach. It is proposed that Kazan, a city with a population of over a million in the European part of Russia, has good chances of moving towards age-friendliness and contributing to raising awareness about healthy ageing through Cochrane evidence. One of the eight essential features of age-friendly cities by the World Health Organisation (WHO) directly points to health services. This exploratory study assesses the health information needs of the ageing population of Kazan and the challenges people face in improving their health and longevity. Survey data were used from 134 participants, patients, caregivers and healthcare providers of the Interregional Clinical Diagnostic Centre (ICDC), aged from 30 to over 80 years, and potential associations of the studied parameters with age, gender, quality of life and other characteristics were analysed. Older people (60+) were less positive about their quality of life, took medicines more often on a daily basis (10/16 compared to 29/117 of people under 60), encountered problems with ageing (9/16 compared to 21/117 of people under 60) and rated their quality of life as unsatisfactory (4/14 compared to 9/107 of people under 60). Awareness of EB approaches and Cochrane was higher within health professions (evidence-based medicine: 42/86 vs. 13/48; Cochrane: 32/86 vs. 2/48), and health information needs did not differ between age or gender groups or people with a satisfactory and unsatisfactory quality of life. The minority (10%—13/134) were aware of ageism without age or gender differences. The low awareness calls for the need of Cochrane intervention both for consumers and those in the health profession to raise awareness to contribute to Kazan moving towards an age-friendly city.
Highlights
The strive for healthy ageing is universal
We performed a descriptive study among patients, caregivers and health care workers of the Interregional Clinical Diagnostic Centre (ICDC, Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation), using the simple survey methodology
Of a total of 134 people, who participated in the survey, there were: 44 patients of ICDC, 2 caregivers of the ICDC patients and 88 ICDC staff members
Summary
Healthy ageing is defined by the WHO as “maintaining the functional ability that allows you to do the things you value”, “preserving physical and mental capacity” in an accessible and supportive environment for older people. It is not surprising that one of the eight essential domains of age-friendly cities by the WHO deals with health services. The working age was declared as over 60 years for men and over 55 years for women until 2019 when the retirement age was raised. This demographic shift caused tensions and strains in health and welfare systems [3,4]
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