A revolution in older people's housing and care by 2020

Accessibility Menu

A revolution in older people's housing and care by 2020

Published by Faith D for Anchor Trust in Housing and also in Communities, Health, Local Government
Wednesday 18th June 2008 - 10:09am

RSS View more news and articles by Anchor Trust

Search more member organisations in our Directory

More from Anchor Trust

 

Baby boomers reaching old age will cause a revolution in older peoples housing and care over the next 10 to 15 years.

That is the finding of a new paper from Anchor Trust, Englands largest not-for-profit provider of specialist housing, care and lifestyle services. Anchor 2020: Meeting the challenges of older peoples housing and care argues that longer life expectancies, higher care needs and the aspirations of the demanding baby boomer generation will change the face of older peoples services.

Services will have to become more personalised and much higher quality, right across the income spectrum, in order to meet the next generation of older peoples rising needs, aspirations and ability to pay.

The discussion paper takes the arguments developed in the Governments National Strategy for Housing in an Ageing Society (Feb 2008) and shows how providers must respond on the ground. It shows how demographic, social and economic changes over the next 10-15 years will provoke major quality innovations in older peoples housing and care services.

As baby boomers reach retirement and become customers for care services their approach and attitudes will be far more consumerist than those of their parents. The nature of the boomer generation will result in them demanding more choice in how they spend their retirement than their parents did. The discussion paper outlines Anchors early thinking on developing new services to meet changing demand.

John Belcher, Anchor Trust Chief Executive, said Providers and commissioners have to be ready to meet much higher expectations and more complex needs in the future.

At Anchor, we want to develop closer direct relationships with our customers and ensure we are delivering the quality of homes and services they want from us.

We want to create a future where old age matters and where older peoples housing and lifestyle choices are respected and provided for. Anchor has always been an innovator in our sector. We are developing and expanding our services to ensure older people get the best out of life.

The Anchor 2020 paper is being launched at the Chartered Institute of Housing conference in Harrogate on Wednesday 18 June.
 

ENDS

Anchor 2020: Meeting the challenges of older peoples housing and care is available from www.anchor.org.uk/2020

Media enquiries contact:
Mario Ambrosi
Head of Corporate Communications
Anchor Trust
(o) 020 7759 9104
(m) 07717 348946
 

Comments

No comments yet...

Be the first and post your views below.

Please Login to comment

To comment you must be logged in. You can either Login or Register

LATEST #ukhousing TWEETS

FACEBOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

Latest jobs

Latest jobs

Find and search more jobs in our Jobs Site...

Latest 24dash poll

Can social landlords provide broadband for tenants without state funding?


previous polls Previous polls

Latest blog posts

Lynne Featherstone

"Mike tells Boris what he things of his piddling cut in council tax!"

Published by Lynne Featherstone

Mike Tuffrey always did have a way of telling it like it is. In my day on the London Assembly it was Ken on the...

Anne Rowlands

"Size, it's all relative"

Published by Anne Rowlands

I found myself agreeing with the findings of the recent Chartered Institute of Housing report - Does size matter - or...

Andy Boddington

"Janet Street-Porter is right about Willy Wonka managers at the BBC but so wrong about local radio"

Published by Andy Boddington

In today’s Independent on Sunday, col