China, Aging and Health
Volume 2 - Issue 4
Jason Powell*
Received: August 30, 2018; Published: September 11, 2018
DOI: 10.32474/RRHOAJ.2018.02.000143
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Abstract
Academics from across the world are increasingly concerned about the rising numbers of older people in their society. There are
worries about the inadequacy of pension funds, of growing pressures on health systems, and on the inability of shrinking numbers
of younger people to carry the burden of their elders. This article focuses on such health issues in China, where the older people
have become a rapidly expanding proportion of the population. While resources do need to be targeted on the vulnerable older
people, the presumption that older people as a whole are an economic and health burden must be questioned. This is an agist
view that needs to be combated by locating how bio-medical views on aging seep into health policy spaces in China that position
negative perceptions of aging as both individual and populational problems. The article then moves to observe the implications
of bio-medicine for older people in China in terms of “vulnerable” aging but deconstruct such “fixed” explanations by juxtaposing
active aging as key narrative that epitomizes “declining to decline” as espoused by health sciences.
Keywords: Aging; Health; Biomedicalization; China; Policy
Abstract|
Introduction|
Bio-Medicine, Family Care, and Aging: Implications
for China|
Declining to Decline-Active Aging?|
Concluding Comments|
References|