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Growing number of elderly people (60 years or above) in India (7.4% of total population in 2001) and various vulnerabilities they faces demands an urgent attention from policy makers and society. The elders are increasingly susceptible to issues of health care, livelihood and security.
The vulnerabilities of elderly can be largely attributed to the phenomenon of migration and urbanization in following ways:
The following recommendations are specially aimed at improving the living standards of older persons in India to deal with problems of Urbanisation and migration that is affecting elderly.
Income insecurity, illiteracy, age related morbidity, and physical and economic dependency are factors that tend to make the Indian elderly vulnerable. So the approach needs to be holistic and multidimensional; at the individual, family, community, governmental and non-governmental levels.
By: ABHISHEK KUMAR GARG ProfileResourcesReport error
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