Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future

Ageing population of India will transform into the elderly in future. The issue of health of the elderly population in India has arrested the attention of health policy makers and the researchers, in the recent past. Demographic structure, quality of life, healthcare services and government planning...

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Main Author: Shradha Mathur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Makhdoomi Printers 2015-01-01
Series:Global Journal of Medicine and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://gjmedph.com/uploads/O5-Vo4No6.pdf
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spelling doaj-000a1fd8c9754ff5bdd83ea309aa796b2020-11-24T21:48:23ZengMakhdoomi PrintersGlobal Journal of Medicine and Public Health 2277-96042277-96042015-01-0146Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the futureShradha MathurAgeing population of India will transform into the elderly in future. The issue of health of the elderly population in India has arrested the attention of health policy makers and the researchers, in the recent past. Demographic structure, quality of life, healthcare services and government planning have serious implications on the ageing population. The objective of the research article is to systematically and critically evaluate the impact of demographic transition, projected demographic indicators and changing population characteristics on the health status of the elderly persons living in India in the coming decades. Analysis and discussions are based on secondary data published by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of the Government of India. The results indicate that India will be an ageing nation in the coming years and improvements in health, education and government planning are likely to enhance the life expectancy of the elderly, while the share of children will reduce, suggesting an increase in dependency of the older persons on the adult population. The article provides insights into workable solutions and suggests key recommendations to attain faster demographic dividend. India would be competing with the pressure of a dramatic demographic bulge in future.http://gjmedph.com/uploads/O5-Vo4No6.pdfAgeingDemographyHealthEducation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shradha Mathur
spellingShingle Shradha Mathur
Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
Global Journal of Medicine and Public Health
Ageing
Demography
Health
Education
author_facet Shradha Mathur
author_sort Shradha Mathur
title Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
title_short Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
title_full Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
title_fullStr Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
title_full_unstemmed Demographic transition and population ageing in India: Implications on the elderly of the future
title_sort demographic transition and population ageing in india: implications on the elderly of the future
publisher Makhdoomi Printers
series Global Journal of Medicine and Public Health
issn 2277-9604
2277-9604
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Ageing population of India will transform into the elderly in future. The issue of health of the elderly population in India has arrested the attention of health policy makers and the researchers, in the recent past. Demographic structure, quality of life, healthcare services and government planning have serious implications on the ageing population. The objective of the research article is to systematically and critically evaluate the impact of demographic transition, projected demographic indicators and changing population characteristics on the health status of the elderly persons living in India in the coming decades. Analysis and discussions are based on secondary data published by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of the Government of India. The results indicate that India will be an ageing nation in the coming years and improvements in health, education and government planning are likely to enhance the life expectancy of the elderly, while the share of children will reduce, suggesting an increase in dependency of the older persons on the adult population. The article provides insights into workable solutions and suggests key recommendations to attain faster demographic dividend. India would be competing with the pressure of a dramatic demographic bulge in future.
topic Ageing
Demography
Health
Education
url http://gjmedph.com/uploads/O5-Vo4No6.pdf
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