Abstract

In the present paper, we provide a general overview of the changing position of the aged population in Iceland. After a long history of subsistence, Icelandic society has evolved only recently from pre-industrial conditions compared with other Western developed nations. The 1000-year preindustrial record is in large part one of a struggle for survival in which formal and informal measures to support the frail and disabled were often overwhelmed by disease and famine; this history is outlined to provide a baseline for recent changes. Both the speed and propinquity of Iceland's transition from these conditions have left a unique stamp on the present-day society: development has driven a quick elaboration of occupational roles and other social status shifts, vast health status improvements, and great population and urban growth. Public and personal health services have grown in scope and adequacy in comparatively recent decades, contributing to the now unsurpassed health status of the general population. The effect of these trends on the condition of elderly is described. As the birth rate in Iceland has dropped in recent decades, the proportion and number of Icelanders in the older and especially the oldest age-strata has been steadily rising. The current and planned organization of health and social services is reviewed, as Iceland faces new tasks of caring for elderly.

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