Aging in atlantic Canada: service-rich and service-poor communities.

Healthc Policy

Formerly Project Coordinator, Quality and Performance Improvement, The Scarborough Hospital, Toronto, ON.

Published: August 2009

The delivery of services for seniors in Canada is increasingly complex and challenging. Communities across Canada age at different rates, and the forces underlying the differences, such as "aging in place" and migration, vary from community to community. We have identified two types of aging communities: service-rich communities, in which seniors have good health status and better amenities, and service-poor communities, in which seniors have poor health status and limited amenities. We also report on results for Atlantic Canada from a national study of service provisions. Three issues stand out: (a) the impact on communities of migration and aging in place, (b) the factors that distinguish service-rich and service-poor communities and (c) the conditions necessary to create a service-rich community. All levels of government in Atlantic Canada must work together to develop policies and programs that create and sustain service-rich communities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2732661PMC

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