Future Services
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Future Services posts
Kernels, cotton wool and latex gloves - Simulating ageing Permalink
First posted at 21:07GMT on 18/08/08 by Amelia Sanders
New York Times article on a programme to sensitise organisations to older people - simulating impaired senses and putting people through a series of everyday tasks - such as planning a road trip..
Public services on the wireless Permalink
First posted at 11:57GMT on 17/07/08 by Amelia Sanders

The Audit commission report ‘Don’t Stop me Now’ found local authorities ‘woefully unprepared’ for the increase in the ageing population. They’ve pulled out some examples of good practice too - including this council-funded community radio station for older people in rural Cornwall.
A few weeks back this Thai Community radio station caught our eye.
“Bangkok’s ‘quality of life’ radio station provides a lifeline in a city where public services are haphazard at best. The all-talk format of RDCK is a call to action and an attempt to solve problems via the community and its bulging Roladex. Lawyers, doctors, bus drivers, midwives and snake catchers are glued to the frequency. Monocle’s Bangkok correspondent David Fullbrook tuned in for the day.”
The Apple Store for the Elderly Permalink
First posted at 23:44GMT on 26/06/08 by Amelia Sanders
HOJO is a health an wellness store for seniors. They recently opened in Lyon and have plans to spread across France.
Whereas many existing senior-focused merchants tend to focus on disabilities - ElderDepot.com is one example - HOJO offers a more holistic variety of about 400 lifestyle products dedicated to keeping senior citizens happy, healthy and independent for as long as possible. Inspired by Spain’s SeniorStore, HOJO groups its products into categories including wellness and health, daily living, leisure and comfort, communication and security…
Read the full article on Springwise
Japanese elders turn to extreme sheltered housing option Permalink
First posted at 23:54GMT on 03/04/08 by Amelia Sanders
According to a recent report by the Ministry of Justice, more and more elderly Japanese are turning to crime out of poverty and isolation, suggesting a breakdown in traditional family and community ties. With nowhere else to go, more elderly inmates serve out their full sentences, instead of being released on parole like younger prisoners. What is more, recidivism is higher among them.
“There are some elderly who are afraid of going back into society”, said Takashi Hayashi, Onomichi’s vice director. “If they stay in prison, everything’s taken care of. There are examples of elderly who’ve left prison, used up what money they had, then were arrested after shoplifting at a convenience store. They’d made up their minds to go back to prison.”
Read the full article in the International Herald Tribune
I retired too early! Permalink
First posted at 22:58GMT on 17/03/08 by Amelia Sanders
In a case of a real life less ordinary, El Inglé, a Matador from Salford, has announced that he is returning to bull fighting aged 65 after retiring “too early”. (Aged 62) This is despite a recent heart bypass and an artifical knee…
Full article in the Guardian










