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Launch WEBINAR from World Health Organization: Long-term care for older people: Package for universal health coverage. 8 May 2024

Launch WEBINAR from World Health Organization: Long-term care for older people: Package for universal health coverage. 8 May 2024

08/05/2024

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International

Published:
02 May 2024

World Health Organization
Launch of the Long-Term Care for Older People: Package for Universal Health Coverage

8 May 2024, Global Webinar

Time: 14:00 – 15:30 CET

Link: Register to join on Zoom

In 2020, the United Nations (UN) General Assembly adopted the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021–2030), which is a transformative collaboration of diverse sectors and stakeholders to foster healthy ageing for older people. The fourth Action Area of the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (i.e., “Providing access to long-term care for older people who need it”) encompasses the provision of essential services to allow older people needing long-term care to maintain functional ability, enjoy basic human rights, live with dignity, as well as supporting family carers in the delivery of proper care without detrimental consequences.

In this accord, WHO has developed a package of interventions that are essential to ensure long-term care. A webinar will be held to launch this new guidance, entitled ‘Long-term care for older people: package for universal health coverage’. The objectives of this technical product are:

  • To define a list of long-term care interventions to be considered, prioritized, and provided by countries through the integration of health and social care;
  • To support governments and policy-makers at national or subnational level in the planning and implementation of long-term care services;
  • To give visibility and value to the vital role and needs of unpaid carers.

The event will present the content and key messages of the package of interventions;

  • Share examples from countries and programmes on how critical long-term care services and interventions can be provided;
  • Listen to the voices and lived experiences of older people, carers and workers on the need for improving long-term care services;
  • Provide a narrative on the importance of long-term care to respond to ageing and its integration into universal health coverage