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Nurses and the Decade of Healthy Ageing: An Unprecedented Opportunity
Journal of Gerontological Nursing ( IF 1.1 ) Pub Date : 2022-05-01 , DOI: 10.3928/00989134-20220422-01
Jennifer Baumbusch 1 , Emma P Blakey 2 , Anna Carapellotti 3 , Marleen Dohmen 4 , Donna M Fick 5 , Sarah H Kagan 6 , G J Melendez-Torres 7 , Brianna E Morgan 8 , Ellen Munsterman 9 , Barbara Resnick 10 , Heather M Young 11
Affiliation  

Introduction

The United Nations (UN; 2020) declared this decade to be that of healthy aging back in May 2020. Is that declaration news to you? Don't feel alone if this is the first you've heard about the Decade of Healthy Ageing (access https://www.decadeofhealthyageing.org). Remember, throughout 2020, the world, and especially we nurses, were contending with the first months of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. The pandemic made it easy to miss anything that appeared unconnected to it. But missing the first year in the Decade of Healthy Ageing does not make this global initiative any less important. Indeed, the mission and aims of this initiative are vital to every person in every community around the world. Work we will do in the coming years as nurses and global citizens for this decade focused on healthy aging and well-being during later life is critical to ourselves, our families, and our communities.

Scan the title applied by the UN again: the Decade of Healthy Ageing. This initiative is focused on everyone living anywhere around the world. Ten years focused on a truly universal human aim, a foundation for a better tomorrow for every human being. That focus requires us to discard an assumption most nurses hold, however implicitly. We must give up the notion of us—nurses, health care professionals, younger people—and them—older people. None of us can afford to think about older people and the process of getting to be one as some distant event. To exclude ourselves as we think about aging healthily and well is to imagine that healthy aging applies to a well-defined group of older people. Remember, whatever our chronological age now, we are all aging, or at least hope to do so.

Committing to healthy aging is as essential to global health as it is to individual health. That commitment offers unparalleled power from which current models and modes of health care prevent us from realizing. Dismantling ageism unlocks the power to realize our capacities for health and well-being. Our awareness of the extent to which ageism and other forms of social discrimination harm individual and global health is greater than ever before. The World Health Organization's (WHO; 2021a) Global Campaign to Combat Ageism emphasizes how pervasive and harmful ageism is for people of all ages. The WHO (2021b) Global Report on Ageism is a go-to resource every nurse can include in their library.

That ageism counters healthy aging is clear. Ageism is the social discrimination we wage against our future selves as we levy it on others. A pervasive and accepted expression of social and personal diminution, ageism affects health and limits healthy aging. Ageism typically appears in concert with healthism—discriminating against people based on their perceived health status—and ableism—discrimination expressed based on perceived ability and disability. Ageism also appears with and compounds healthism and ableism; racism and ethnocentrism; sexism and gender discrimination; queer, trans, and homophobia; and religious discrimination, including Islamophobia and Anti-Semitism. Evidence points toward the extent to which individuals damage their own health by believing negative myths about getting older. Other evidence shows that ageism expressed toward others harms those people's health, too. Nonetheless, the ways and extent to which healthism, ableism, and all other forms of social discrimination affect and promote what ageism does to health and well-being are less clear. Needs for high-quality science examining what ageism does to health and well-being and the mechanisms of those affects remain.

Our call, as nurses, to promote health and well-being for people of all ages cannot simply be set aside as we await further science. This Decade of Healthy Ageing is our call to action. We frequently let the strengths of our nursing perspective fade in the shadow of the biomedically influenced view of aging as a process of loss and being old as a state of vulnerability and decline. The reality of proximate death is somehow taken in a biomedical review means to strip agency, assign a permanent state of vulnerability, and presume superior knowledge. This approach belies who we are as nurses. We know a better way. Our implicit approach to personhood, strength, and capacity toward older individuals and populations reveals who we truly are as nurses and portends our contribution to this Decade of Healthy Ageing.

Values nurses around the world typically call up when asked about why they are nurses tell a different story than the allopathic model in which health care systems immerse us. We speak to holism, care, compassion, agape love, and advocacy. We see people as individuals, families, and communities as partners in care. Those people are our patients and clients only in relationship to us as nurses. Without patient or client there is no nurse. Models of nursing emphasize person, nurse, self-care, conservation of the person, health, well-being, and environment. Why then do we let ageism block those values and shift our focus? Too often situations and settings damp down our nursing perspective, allowing the structural ageism of health care to rise. That ageism means what matters to the person is missed as their problem list surmounts all else. Their preferences, aims, and priorities are left unknown as we and our health care colleagues seek to manage the list of their problems that we compile for and not with them. Such a biomedically centric approach belies a true sense of health and well-being in the salutogenic—or health promoting—sense inherent to our nursing perspective.

Shifting away from the structural and individual ageism of health care and returning to our disciplinary values, we are set to see the Decade of Healthy Ageing in the context of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). A brief study of all 17 goals reveals direct and indirect links to healthy aging and the consequence of greater well-being. Goal 3—ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages (access https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/health)—is obviously connected to the role we can plan in this decade. A bit of contemplation shows that Goal 10—reduce inequality within and among countries (access https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/inequality)—is also connected, as effects of poverty among older people and poverty on health are quickly connected. Goals, such as SDG 4— quality education (access https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/education)—might seem irrelevant to healthy aging with emphasis placed on children and young people. A closer examination tells a vastly different story. Unmistakable evidence points to foundational education and life-long learning as a key to healthy, long, and well-lived lives. Quality education is then directly related to healthy aging. This SDG is also indirectly related to healthy aging if we consider teaching and who will instruct our children and young people. Many communities face shortages of teachers. Many older people contend with ageist employment discrimination. We know that meaning and a sense of purpose are integral to well-being in later life. Why not then call our older people to think about becoming teachers? Analyzed in this way, the connection between Goal 4 and healthy aging is obvious and potential ways to attain this SDG and help fulfill the Decade of Healthy Ageing quickly emerge.

The goals focused on work and industry, such as those addressing the needs of children, appear wholly disconnected from healthy aging. But here again, our ageism is clearly getting the better of us as we draw this conclusion. Longevity economics tells us just how much older people contribute to work, industry, innovation, and economies. Older people are far from an economic burden. More older people than ever before are working in paid and unpaid employment. These older people often do jobs, such as childcare and personal care, for people of all ages who need support. They are thus enabling family members and neighbors to work at other jobs. Conversely, when older people need support themselves, they are creating employment for others. Among other groups, we nurses then benefit directly from older people's economic influence, their work, and effects of the economic impetus they generate in myriad industries and for innumerable innovations, including those in health care.

The SDGs centered on the health of the planet may seem similarly separate from healthy aging. In September 2021, the International Journal of Older People Nursing was one of >200 journals to simultaneously publish an unprecedented editorial on the climate crisis and the imperative to restore a healthy climate (Atwoli et al., 2021). We all hold fast to the assertion that global heating imperils all health, and specifically health in later life, meriting emergency action among global and national leaders, industry, and citizens. The SDGs addressing sustainability, recycling, and restoring all aspects of our planet's health are fundamental to healthy aging. The choice is simple to say but difficult to comprehend. We can choose an unhealthy planet and try to nurse unhealthy people who live and die on it or work toward a healthy planet and with it a healthy climate where people can age healthfully and well. Around the world, not one person—including all nurses— will age with health and well-being if we do not limit global heating to no more than 1.5°C to 2°C. Achieving that aim mandates we decarbonize all industries—including health care— and communities while actively repairing and protecting environments around the world. Globally, nurses are already making progress on decarbonizing health care and, with all of us working together, even more change is possible.

Our opportunity in the Decade of Healthy Ageing is immense. Goal 17—revitalize the global partnership for sustainable development (access https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/globalpartnerships)—speaks directly to how we can capitalize on that opportunity. Although Goal 17 emphasizes building back new and stronger partnerships in the aftermath of the pandemic, the connection to the Decade of Healthy Ageing is evident and actionable. The pandemic threatened healthy aging in myriad ways. It highlighted longstanding shortcomings in care for older people. Moreover, COVID-19 infection itself is likely to threaten healthy aging with long-term effects on many body systems, including neurological and endocrine. Partnerships crossing traditional sector boundaries are essential to revitalize work toward SDGs and essential to the Decade of Healthy Ageing. Our perspective as nurses, freed from structural and individual ageism and concomitant discrimination, is needed throughout health care and beyond. Our nascent collaborations in social care and integrated social and health care for older people offer examples to help us cross sector boundaries to create new and stronger partnerships. We must also look beyond social and health care, across our wider communities, to fully capitalize on opportunity in the remaining years of this decade and beyond.

The International Federation for Ageing (IFA) is leading the charge to achieve civil society engagement in the Decade of Healthy Ageing. The Civil Society Mapping and Engagement Initiative (access https://www.decadeofhealthyageing.org/topics-initiatives/other-initiatives/civil-society-mapping) aims to leverage partnerships between and among civil society organizations to improve the lives of older people, their families, and their communities by shaping policy and action around the world. The IFA is calling on organizations and institutions across all disciplines and sectors to get involved in The Civil Society Mapping and Engagement Initiative. That's where you can get involved!

The Civil Society Mapping and Engagement Initiative is a portal for us to capitalize on the opportunity this Decade of Healthy Ageing holds. Health care organizations are obvious partners, with the initiative offering great alignment with age-friendly and dementia-friendly initiatives. We can urge our employers to get involved in the mapping process and to consider strategic and operational linkages with planned and existing age-friendly and dementia-friendly endeavors. Moreover, as nurses, we are engaged in many other organizations across our communities and societies. We might staff a health or other type of committee at our place of worship, volunteer at a foodbank, contribute to a charity shop, or sit on the board of a corporation. Any of those organizations are perfect candidates to connect to the Civil Society Mapping and Engagement Initiative, reflect on the Decade of Healthy Ageing, and plan how to get involved. We nurses, with our many commitments and roles, are well positioned to be catalysts for such involvement.

We urge our fellow nurses and citizens to embrace the Decade of Healthy Ageing. The opportunities and possibilities for good that benefit us and the places—communities, societies, and the planet—that we call home are limitless. Realizing the power of being healthy, defined as an ever-expanding salutogenic state that affects all aspects of our lives as we live them, is empowering. Together, we can capitalize on that power now, during this current Decade of Healthy Ageing, and beyond. As we move forward to achieve the aims of this Decade, please consider sharing your research with us here at Geriatric Nursing, International Journal of Older People Nursing, Journal of Gerontological Nursing, or Research in Gerontological Nursing, depending on the audience you wish to reach. Highlight your research, civil society partnerships, and activities related to the Decade of Healthy Ageing and the UN SDGs on social media. To do so, just follow our journals on Twitter (@gnjournal; @IntJnlOPN; @JGNJournal; @RGNJournal) and join the IJOPN Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/IJOPN/ or SLACK Nursing Journals page at https://www.facebook.com/SlackNursingJournals. Tag @UNDecadeAgeing, @IntFedAgeing, and @UN_SDG when you share your research and civil society engagement related to the Decade of Healthy Ageing. Please also use the hashtags #HealthyAgeing (or #HealthyAging), #GlobalGoals, and #GeroNurses. As #GeroNurses, we know that #HealthyAgeing is chief among our #GlobalGoals! Acting together, we truly can achieve #HealthyAgeing for all.

Jennifer Baumbusch, PhD, RN, FAAN

Associate Editor, International Journal of

Older People Nursing

Associate Professor, University of British

Columbia

Vancouver, BC, Canada

Emma P. Blakey, MSc, BSc(Hons), RN

Social Media Editor, International Journal

of Older People Nursing

PhD Candidate, Oxford Brookes University

Oxford, England

Anna Carapellotti, PhD, BA

Social Media Editor, International Journal

of Older People Nursing

Post-Doctoral Researcher, Queen's University

Belfast, Northern Ireland

Marleen Dohmen, MSc, BSc

Social Media Editor, International Journal

of Older People Nursing

PhD Candidate, Leyden Academy on

Vitality and Ageing

Leiden, Netherlands

Donna M. Fick, PhD, RN, FAAN, FGSA

Editor, Journal of Gerontological Nursing

Professor, Pennsylvania State University

University Park, Pennsylvania

Sarah H. Kagan, PhD, RN, FAAN, FGSA

Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of

Older People Nursing

Professor of Gerontological Nursing,

University of Pennsylvania

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

G.J. Melendez-Torres, PhD, RN, FAAN

Associate Editor, International Journal of

Older People Nursing

Professor, University of Exeter

Exeter, England

Brianna E. Morgan, MSN, CRNP, ACHPN

Social Media Editor, International Journal

of Older People Nursing

PhD Candidate, University of Pennsylvania

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Ellen Munsterman, MSN, RN, AGCNS-BC

Social Media Editor, International Journal

of Older People Nursing

PhD Student, University of Pennsylvania

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, FAAN, FGSA

Editor, Geriatric Nursing

Professor, University of Maryland

Baltimore, Maryland

Heather M. Young, PhD, RN, FAAN, FGSA

Editor, Research in Gerontological Nursing

Professor and Dean Emerita, University of

California Davis

Davis, California

  • Atwoli L., Baqui A. H., Benfield T., Bosurgi R., Godlee F., Hancocks S., Horton R., Laybourn-Langton L., Monteiro C. A., Norman I., Patrick K., Praities N., Olde Rikkert M. G. M., Rubin E.J., Sahni P., Smith R., Talley N. J., Turale S., & Vázquez D. (2021). Call for emergency action to limit global temperature increases, restore biodiversity and protect health: Wealthy nations must do much more, much faster. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 16(5), e12422. 10.1111/opn.12422

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中文翻译:

护士与健康老龄化十年:前所未有的机遇

介绍

早在 2020 年 5 月,联合国 (UN; 2020) 就宣布这十年是健康老龄化的十年。这个宣言对你来说是新闻吗?如果这是您第一次听说健康老龄化十年(访问 https://www.decadeofhealthyageing.org),请不要感到孤单。请记住,在整个 2020 年,全世界,尤其是我们的护士,都在与 2019 年冠状病毒病 (COVID-19) 大流行的头几个月作斗争。大流行使人们很容易错过任何似乎与它无关的东西。但错过健康老龄化十年的第一年并没有降低这项全球倡议的重要性。事实上,这项倡议的使命和目标对全世界每个社区的每个人都至关重要。

再次扫描联合国的标题:健康老龄化十年。该倡议的重点是生活在世界各地的每个人。十年专注于一个真正普遍的人类目标,为每个人的更美好明天奠定基础。这种关注要求我们放弃大多数护士持有的假设,无论多么含蓄。我们必须放弃我们——护士、医疗保健专业人员、年轻人——以及他们——老年人的概念。我们谁都负担不起把老年人和成为一个人的过程视为遥不可及的事情。在我们考虑健康老龄化时排除自己,就是想象健康老龄化适用于定义明确的老年人群。请记住,无论我们现在的实际年龄如何,我们都在变老,或者至少希望这样做。

致力于健康老龄化对于全球健康和个人健康同样重要。这一承诺提供了无与伦比的力量,目前的医疗保健模式和模式使我们无法实现这一目标。消除年龄歧视释放了实现我们健康和福祉能力的力量。我们比以往任何时候都更加意识到年龄歧视和其他形式的社会歧视对个人和全球健康的损害程度。世界卫生组织 (WHO; 2021a) 全球打击年龄歧视运动强调年龄歧视对所有年龄段的人来说是多么普遍和有害。世卫组织 (2021b) 全球年龄歧视报告是每位护士都可以将其纳入图书馆的首选资源。

年龄歧视反对健康老龄化是显而易见的。年龄歧视是我们对未来的自己施加的社会歧视,因为我们对他人施加了歧视。年龄歧视是社会和个人减少的普遍和公认的表现,它影响健康并限制健康老龄化。年龄歧视通常与健康主义(根据人们感知的健康状况歧视人们)和能力歧视同时出现——基于感知能力和残疾的歧视。年龄歧视也与健康主义和能力主义一起出现并复合;种族主义和民族中心主义;性别歧视和性别歧视;酷儿、跨性别和同性恋恐惧症;和宗教歧视,包括仇视伊斯兰教和反犹太主义。有证据表明个人因相信有关变老的负面神话而损害自身健康的程度。其他证据表明,对他人表达的年龄歧视也会损害这些人的健康。尽管如此,健康主义、能力主义和所有其他形式的社会歧视影响和促进年龄歧视对健康和福祉的影响的方式和程度尚不清楚。仍然需要高质量的科学来研究年龄歧视对健康和福祉的影响以及这些影响的机制。

作为护士,我们呼吁为所有年龄段的人促进健康和福祉,在我们等待进一步的科学之前,不能简单地搁置一边。健康老龄化十年是我们的行动号召。我们经常让我们的护理观点的优势在受生物医学影响的观点的阴影下消失,即衰老是一个丧失的过程,衰老是一种脆弱和衰退的状态。以某种方式在生物医学审查中采用了濒临死亡的现实,以剥夺代理权,分配永久的脆弱状态,并假定具有优越的知识。这种方法掩盖了我们作为护士的身份。我们知道更好的方法。我们对老年人和人群的人格、力量和能力的隐含态度揭示了我们作为护士的真实身份,并预示着我们对这个健康老龄化十年的贡献。

当被问及为什么他们是护士时,世界各地的护士通常会提出与医疗保健系统让我们沉浸其中的对抗疗法模式不同的故事。我们谈论整体论、关怀、同情、爱与倡导。我们将人们视为个人、家庭和社区,将其视为护理合作伙伴。这些人是我们的病人和客户,只是与我们作为护士的关系。没有病人或客户就没有护士。护理模式强调人、护士、自我保健、人的保护、健康、福祉和环境。那么为什么我们要让年龄歧视阻碍这些价值观并转移我们的注意力呢?很多情况和环境会削弱我们对护理的看法,从而使医疗保健的结构性年龄歧视上升。这种年龄歧视意味着对这个人重要的事情被遗漏了,因为他们的问题清单超越了所有其他问题。他们的偏好、目标和优先事项是未知的,因为我们和我们的医疗保健同事试图管理我们为他们而不是与他们一起编制的问题清单。这种以生物医学为中心的方法掩盖了我们护理观点固有的有益健康或促进健康的真正意义上的健康和幸福感。

摆脱医疗保健的结构性和个人年龄歧视,回归我们的学科价值观,我们将在联合国可持续发展目标 (SDG) 的背景下看到健康老龄化十年。对所有 17 个目标的简要研究揭示了与健康老龄化和更大福祉的结果的直接和间接联系。目标 3——确保健康生活并促进所有年龄段所有人的福祉(访问 https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/health)——显然与我们在这十年中可以规划的角色有关。稍加思考就表明,目标 10——减少国家内部和国家之间的不平等(访问 https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/inequality)——也是相关联的,因为老年人的贫困和贫困对健康的影响很快就相关联. 目标,例如 SDG 4 — 优质教育(访问 https://www. un.org/sustainabledevelopment/education)——似乎与健康老龄化无关,重点是儿童和年轻人。更仔细的研究会讲述一个截然不同的故事。明确无误的证据表明,基础教育和终身学习是健康、长寿和幸福生活的关键。素质教育与健康老龄化直接相关。如果我们考虑教学以及谁将指导我们的儿童和青少年,这个可持续发展目标也与健康老龄化间接相关。许多社区面临教师短缺的问题。许多老年人与年龄歧视的就业歧视作斗争。我们知道,意义和目标感是晚年幸福不可或缺的一部分。那么为什么不叫我们的老年人考虑成为老师呢?这样分析,

专注于工作和工业的目标,例如满足儿童需求的目标,似乎与健康老龄化完全脱节。但是在这里,当我们得出这个结论时,我们的年龄歧视显然正在变得更好。长寿经济学告诉我们老年人对工作、工业、创新和经济的贡献有多大。老年人远没有经济负担。从事有偿和无偿工作的老年人比以往任何时候都多。这些老年人经常为需要支持的各个年龄段的人从事儿童保育和个人护理等工作。因此,他们使家庭成员和邻居能够从事其他工作。相反,当老年人自己需要支持时,他们正在为他人创造就业机会。在其他群体中,我们护士直接受益于老年人的经济影响、他们的工作、

以地球健康为中心的可持续发展目标似乎与健康老龄化同样不同。2021 年 9 月,国际老年护理杂志是同时发表关于气候危机和恢复健康气候的必要性的前所未有的社论的 200 多种期刊之一(Atwoli 等人,2021 年)。我们都坚持认为,全球变暖危及所有人的健康,尤其是晚年的健康,值得全球和国家领导人、行业和公民采取紧急行动。解决可持续发展、回收利用和恢复地球健康各个方面的可持续发展目标是健康老龄化的基础。选择说起来简单,但很难理解。我们可以选择一个不健康的星球,并尝试照顾那些在其上生活和死去的不健康的人,或者努力打造一个健康的星球,以及一个健康的气候,让人们可以健康地变老。在世界各地,如果我们不将全球升温限制在不超过 1.5°C 到 2°C 的范围内,没有一个人(包括所有护士)会随着健康和福祉而变老。为实现这一目标,我们对所有行业(包括医疗保健)和社区进行脱碳,同时积极修复和保护世界各地的环境。在全球范围内,护士已经在脱碳医疗保健方面取得进展,并且在我们所有人的共同努力下,更多的改变是可能的。

我们在健康老龄化十年中的机会是巨大的。目标 17——重振可持续发展全球伙伴关系(访问 https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/globalpartnerships)——直接谈到了我们如何利用这一机会。尽管目标 17 强调在大流行之后重建新的和更强大的伙伴关系,但与健康老龄化十年的联系是显而易见且可行的。大流行以多种方式威胁着健康老龄化。它强调了在照顾老年人方面长期存在的缺陷。此外,COVID-19 感染本身可能会威胁到健康老龄化,并对许多身体系统产生长期影响,包括神经系统和内分泌系统。跨越传统部门界限的伙伴关系对于振兴实现可持续发展目标的工作至关重要,对于健康老龄化十年至关重要。我们作为护士的观点,从结构性和个人年龄歧视以及随之而来的歧视中解放出来,在整个医疗保健和其他领域都是需要的。我们在社会关怀和老年人综合社会和医疗保健方面的新兴合作提供了帮助我们跨越部门界限以建立新的和更强大的伙伴关系的例子。我们还必须超越社会和医疗保健,在我们更广泛的社区中,充分利用本十年剩余几年及以后的机会。我们在社会关怀和老年人综合社会和医疗保健方面的新兴合作提供了帮助我们跨越部门界限以建立新的和更强大的伙伴关系的例子。我们还必须超越社会和医疗保健,在我们更广泛的社区中,充分利用本十年剩余几年及以后的机会。我们在社会关怀和老年人综合社会和医疗保健方面的新兴合作提供了帮助我们跨越部门界限以建立新的和更强大的伙伴关系的例子。我们还必须超越社会和医疗保健,在我们更广泛的社区中,充分利用本十年剩余几年及以后的机会。

国际老龄问题联合会 (IFA) 正在带头推动民间社会参与“健康老龄化十年”。民间社会绘图和参与倡议(访问 https://www.decadeofhealthyageing.org/topics-initiatives/other-initiatives/civil-society-mapping)旨在利用民间社会组织之间的伙伴关系来改善老年人的生活,他们的家人和他们的社区,通过在世界各地制定政策和行动。IFA 呼吁所有学科和部门的组织和机构参与民间社会绘图和参与倡议。那就是你可以参与的地方!

公民社会绘图和参与倡议是我们利用健康老龄化十年所拥有的机会的门户。医疗保健组织显然是合作伙伴,该倡议与老年友好型和痴呆友好型倡议非常一致。我们可以敦促我们的雇主参与规划过程,并考虑与计划和现有的老年友好型和痴呆友好型努力的战略和运营联系。此外,作为护士,我们参与了社区和社会的许多其他组织。我们可能会在我们的礼拜场所为健康或其他类型的委员会工作,在食品银行做志愿者,为慈善商店捐款,或担任公司董事会成员。这些组织中的任何一个都是与民间社会绘图和参与倡议建立联系、反思健康老龄化十年并计划如何参与的完美候选人。我们护士承担着许多责任和角色,能够很好地成为这种参与的催化剂。

我们敦促我们的护士同胞和公民拥抱健康老龄化十年。有益于我们和我们称之为家的地方——社区、社会和地球——的机会和可能性是无限的。意识到健康的力量,被定义为一种不断扩大的有益状态,会影响我们生活的方方面面,这是一种赋权。现在,在当前的健康老龄化十年及以后,我们可以一起利用这种力量。随着我们朝着实现这个十年的目标前进,请考虑在老年护理国际老年人护理杂志、老年护理杂志老年护理研究,具体取决于您希望覆盖的受众。在社交媒体上突出您与健康老龄化十年和联合国可持续发展目标相关的研究、民间社会伙伴关系和活动。为此,只需在 Twitter (@gnjournal;@IntJnlOPN;@JGNJournal;@RGNJournal) 上关注我们的期刊,并在 https://www.facebook.com/IJOPN/ 或 SLACK Nursing Journals 页面加入 IJOPN Facebook 页面 https://www.facebook.com/IJOPN/: //www.facebook.com/SlackNursingJournals。当您分享与健康老龄化十年相关的研究和民间社会参与时,请标记@UNDecadeAgeing、@IntFedAgeing 和@UN_SDG。请同时使用#HealthyAgeing(或#HealthyAging)、#GlobalGoals 和#GeroNurses 标签。作为#GeroNurses,我们知道#HealthyAgeing 是我们#GlobalGoals 的首要任务!携手行动,我们真正可以为所有人实现#HealthyAgeing。

Jennifer Baumbusch,博士,注册护士,FAAN

国际期刊副主编

老年人护理

英国大学副教授

哥伦比亚

加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省温哥华

Emma P. Blakey,理学硕士,理学士(荣誉),注册护士

社交媒体编辑,国际期刊

老年人护理

博士生,牛津布鲁克斯大学

英国牛津

安娜carapellotti,博士,文学士

社交媒体编辑,国际期刊

老年人护理

博士后研究员,皇后大学

北爱尔兰贝尔法斯特

Marleen Dohmen,理学硕士,理学士

社交媒体编辑,国际期刊

老年人护理

博士生,莱顿学院

活力与衰老

荷兰莱顿

Donna M. Fick,博士,注册护士,FAAN,FGSA

编辑,老年护理杂志

宾夕法尼亚州立大学教授

宾夕法尼亚大学公园

Sarah H. Kagan,博士,注册护士,FAAN,FGSA

国际期刊主编

老年人护理

老年护理学教授,

宾夕法尼亚大学

宾夕法尼亚州费城

GJ Melendez-Torres,博士,注册护士,FAAN

国际期刊副主编

老年人护理

埃克塞特大学教授

英国埃克塞特

Brianna E. Morgan,MSN,CRNP,ACHPN

社交媒体编辑,国际期刊

老年人护理

宾夕法尼亚大学博士研究生

宾夕法尼亚州费城

Ellen Munsterman, MSN, RN, AGCNS-BC

社交媒体编辑,国际期刊

老年人护理

宾夕法尼亚大学博士生

宾夕法尼亚州费城

Barbara Resnick,博士,CRNP,FAAN,FGSA

编辑,老年护理

马里兰大学教授

马里兰州巴尔的摩

Heather M. Young,博士,注册护士,FAAN,FGSA

编辑,老年护理研究

教授和名誉院长,大学

加利福尼亚戴维斯

加利福尼亚州戴维斯

  • Atwoli L.、Baqui AH、Benfield T.、Bosurgi R.、Godlee F.、Hancocks S.、Horton R.、Laybourn-Langton L.、Monteiro CA、Norman I.、Patrick K.、Praities N.、Olde Rikkert MGM、Rubin EJ、Sahni P.、Smith R.、Talley NJ、Turale S. 和 Vázquez D.2021 年)。呼吁采取紧急行动来限制全球气温升高、恢复生物多样性和保护健康:富裕国家必须做得更多、更快国际老年人护理杂志16 (5),e12422。10.1111/opn.12422

    Crossref Medline,谷歌学术
  • 联合国。(2020 年)。联合国健康老龄化十年。https://www.who.int/initiatives/decade-of-healthy-ageing

    谷歌学术
  • 世界卫生组织。(2021a)。打击年龄歧视。https://www.who.int/teams/social-determinants-of-health/demographic-change-and-healthy-ageing/combatting-ageism

    谷歌学术
  • 世界卫生组织。(2021b)。全球年龄歧视报告。https://www.who.int/teams/social-determinants-of-health/demographic-change-and-healthy-ageing/combatting-ageism/global-report-on-ageism

    谷歌学术
更新日期:2022-05-02
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