Wednesday, October 27, 2021
Friday, October 1, 2021
INTERNATIONAL DAY OF OLDER PERSONS
St. JOSEPH’S COLLGE FOR WOMEN
(A)
DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY
REPORT ON INTERNATIONAL DAY OF
OLDER PERSONS
Date- 01-10-2021 Time-
10.00 to 11.10 am
COORDINATORS-
Dr. P. Mary Anupama
Dr Mousami Shankar Addala
Students involved- Final year BBC students - 40
United
Nations General Assembly designated October 1 as the International Day of Older
Persons in the year 1980. This was preceded by initiatives such as the Vienna International Plan of Action on Ageing, which was adopted by the 1982 World Assembly on
Ageing and endorsed later that year by the UN General Assembly. In 1991, the
General Assembly adopted the United Nations Principles for Older Persons (resolution
46/91). In 2002, the Second
World Assembly on Ageing adopted the Madrid
International Plan of Action on Ageing, to respond to the opportunities and challenges of population ageing
in the 21st century and to promote the development of a society for all ages.
The
composition of the world population has changed dramatically in recent decades.
Between 1950 and 2010, life expectancy worldwide rose from 46 to 68 years.
Globally, there were 703 million persons aged 65 or over in 2019. The region of
Eastern and South-Eastern Asia was home to the largest number of older persons
(261 million), followed by Europe and Northern America (over 200 million). Over the next three decades, the number of older
persons worldwide is projected to more than double, reaching more than 1.5
billion persons in 2050.
The
United Nations Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021-2030) is a global
collaboration, aligned with the last ten years of the Sustainable
Development Goals, that brings together governments, civil
society, international agencies, professionals, academia, the media, and the
private sector to improve the lives of older people, their families, and the
communities in which they live. To foster healthy ageing and improve
the lives of older people and their families and communities, fundamental
shifts will be required not only in the actions we take but in how we think
about age and ageing.
2021 Theme: Digital Equity for All Ages
The 2021 theme “Digital Equity for All Ages” affirms the need for
access and meaningful participation in the digital world by older persons.
The fourth industrial revolution characterized by rapid digital
innovation and by exponential growth has transformed all sectors of society,
including how we live, work and relate to one another. Technological advances
offer great hope for accelerating progress towards the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). Yet, one-half of the global population is off-line, with the
starkest contrast between the most developed countries (87%) and the least
developed countries (19%) (ITU Facts and Figures 2020). Recent
reports by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) indicate
that women and older persons experience digital inequity to a greater extent
than other groups in society; they either lack access to technologies, or are
often not benefitting fully from the opportunities provided by technological
progress.
Objectives of UNIDOP2021:
·
To bring awareness of the importance of digital
inclusion of older persons, while tackling stereotypes, prejudice and
discrimination associated with digitalization, taking into account
sociocultural norms and the right to autonomy.
·
To highlight policies to leverage digital
technologies for full achievement of the sustainable development goals (SDGs).
·
To address public and private interests, in the
areas of availability, connectivity, design, affordability, capacity building,
infrastructure, and innovation.
·
To explore the role of policies and legal
frameworks to ensure privacy and safety of older persons in the digital world.
·
To highlight the need for a legally binding
instrument on the rights of older persons and an intersectional person-cantered
human rights approach for a society for all ages.
Students
were involved in a debate on the theme and they were asked to speak about the
reasons for health issues in children, reasons for their isolation and how we
can make them feel wanted. Then the debate went on to knowing how technology
can reach the elderly people.
Students who involved actively- T. Maha Lakshmi, G.
Harika, Navya D, Renuka Reddy, S. Priyanka, Bhoomija, Shaik Shain, Vaishnavi,
Piyusha, Ritu kumari, Hari Priya, Adama Sarr.
Organizers- Lakshmi Prasanna, Chandini and Harshini.
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