Preparing for a Silver Society
2011-10-14ByWANGHAIRONG
By WANG HAIRONG
Preparing for a Silver Society
By WANG HAIRONG
As greater numbers of Chinese enter their golden age, China is upgrading legal protection of seniors’ rights and interests
China, an ancient country that used to have a young population, is growing older. The sixth national population census conducted on November 1, 2010, found 13.26 percent of the country’s population was at or above 60, 2.93 percentage points higher than a decade ago.
China is an ageing society by international standards. The UN defnes an ageing society as one with at least 10 percent of its population 60 or older.
On May 4, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislature, kicked off inspections on the enforcement of the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly. Chairman Wu Bangguo said the inspections should be combined with efforts to amend the law.
“The law has outlived its adequacy and urgently needs amendment,” said Zeng Qingmin, a researcher with the Institute of Law of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
The Ministry of Civil Affairs and the China National Committee on Ageing started to amend the law in 2007.
Flawed law
China’s Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly was enacted in 1996, before the country grew into an ageing society in 1999.
The law has 50 articles in six chapters, including General Provisions, Maintenance and Support by Families, Social Security, Participation in Social Development, Legal Responsibility and Supplementary Provisions.
“Many predicaments faced by the elderly have become increasingly prominent after the promulgation of the law,” Zeng said. “With many defects, its stipulations are rarely invoked in court rulings on cases involving elderly people.”
“The law is diffcult to enforce because many stipulations are like slogans,” Zeng said. “They are too general to be of practical value, and such terms as ‘the government should encourage’ are often used.”
CARE: Liu Xuehua, a caregiver at a nursing home in Huinong District, Shizuishan City, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, helps a senior woman with her grooming
For instance, in rural areas, senior people are still left living in dilapidated houses even though their children have built new houses and moved in after becoming rich.“The current law has no provisions on this, so it is diffcult to deal with the situation by imposing penalties,” said Song Fei, Deputy Director of the Civil Affairs Bureau of Lu’an City, Anhui Province.
“Instead of using the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly, judicial organs prefer to invoke articles in the General Principles of the Civil Law, the Marriage Law and the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of Women and Children in their rulings on cases involving elderly people,” said Xing Huanping, a project manager with Beijing-based Zhongyi Huoban Elderly Culture Development Center.
Zeng blamed the situation on the fact the importance of the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly doesn’t get the attention it deserves.“General laws based on the Constitution cover the common rights and interests of all citizens, the elderly included,” Zeng said. “Yet, the elderly also have distinct rights, which need special legal protection. Only when the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly is taken seriously and put fully into practice, can it play its expected role.”
He said senior citizens
should be provided for, have access to necessary medical care, have opportunities for their own pursuits and studies, and be able to enjoy themselves. “A workable special law for the elderly should specify these rights in detail,”Zeng said.
Social services
Zeng said the amendment should clarify the government’s responsibility in providing for and looking after the elderly.
He said the law should stipulate the government shoulder major responsibility in providing the elderly with basic social services and meeting their special needs.
In the draft amendment to the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly, a chapter on social nursing care was added, said the Beijing-basedLegalEvening Newsin January.
The proposed addition indicates a shift in China’s traditional belief looking after the elderly is the duty of children.
Article 10 of the current Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly says the elderly shall be provided for mainly by their families, and their family members should care for and look after them.
But, the traditional family structure in China has changed because of the family-planning policy limiting most urban couples to one child and rural couples to two, not to mention increased population mobility and rapid urbanization.
“Now, the size of Chinese households has become smaller. It is diffcult for a young couple to provide for four aged parents. So the elderly increasingly need social assistance,” said Wu Ming, an official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
Many senior citizens have become empty nesters, living alone.
A recent survey conducted by the Civil Affairs Bureau of Zhixi County, Shiyan City in Hubei Province, showed 38.39 percent of the elderly residents in the county did not live with their children. A great number of young and middle-aged people in this less developed county have left home to work in other regions of the country.
The survey revealed the unattended elderly residents encountered various difficulties in their lives and suffered severely from loneliness.
“Senior people need different care. Some need help with personal care such as bathing; some need assistance with housework such as cooking and cleaning, and others need medical services,” Wu said.
He said the proposed chapter on social nursing care in the draft amendment specified three service models—first, home care provided by caregivers from nursing homes, volunteers and social workers; second, community care including services such as medical treatment, cultural and entertainment activities, short-term care and daycare, and third, care provided by nursing homes.
Needs of the disabled
Disabled old people should be given particular attention in the amended Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly, said Liu Xiaobing, a law professor at China University of Political Science and Law.
HOME AWAY FROM HOME: Seniors at Nanshan Home for the Aged in Qingdao City, Shandong Province, celebrate their birthday together with volunteers, on May 6
At the end of 2010, China had approximately 33 million disabled people aged 60 years and older, accounting for 19 percent of the total senior population, says a report recently released by the China National Committee on Ageing.
About 10.8 million elderly people, or 6.23 percent of all, were totally disabled and needed care, the report says. The report defnes a senior as totally disabled if he or she cannot carry out at least one of the following daily activities independently—eating, getting on and off a bed, using the bathroom, walking indoor and bathing.
Currently, a majority of disabled elderly people are not properly cared for. Statistics from the Ministry of Civil Affairs show in 2009, China had nearly 40,000 homes for the aged, which had 2.66 million beds and accommodated 2.11 million people. Yet no more than 17 percent of all residents were disabled.
“Many homes for the aged are not well-equipped for residents in poor health,”said Zhang Kaidi, Director of the China Research Center on Ageing. “No more than 60 percent of the homes have a clinic and no more than 20 percent have a physical rehabilitation therapy section. In rural areas, more than half of the homes for the aged do not have a doctor.”
Moreover, nearly half of the homes said they only or mainly accepted seniors who can take care of themselves, Zhang said.
At present, it is diffcult for able-bodied seniors to get into public homes for the aged, which are more affordable. Many of these institutions have a long waiting list.
Nonetheless, private homes for the aged, especially high-end ones and ones located in suburban areas, have low occupancy rates, as low as 30 percent. But as they are usually inconveniently located or lack necessary medical facilities, many elderly people are reluctant to settle there.
In a survey conducted by the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Statistics in 2010, 55 percent of respondents said they didn’t want to live in homes for the aged at all, and 31.6 percent replied they might choose to spend their remaining years in these homes after reaching a certain age. Among those unwilling to live in retirement homes, 18.3 percent said they could not afford living there.
“When protecting the rights and interests of elderly people, there should be an awareness their needs are common but differentiated,” said Liu. “On one hand, seniors should be guaranteed equal rights; on the other hand, differences among elderly people should be taken into consideration.”
The government can subsidize disabled elderly people to obtain the nursing care services they want, and purchase community services and equipment for them, Liu said.
Zhang said the new law should set up an insurance system for long-term care for the elderly, and specify fnancial incentives given to institutions for taking care of disabled seniors.