Elevating Housing Solutions for the Elderly: Your Expertise is Key

The UK government departments for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) and the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), has launched the "Older People's Housing Taskforce." This initiative is designed to amplify the housing choices, quality, and security available to our ageing populace.  Led by Professor Emerita of Nursing, Julienne Meyer, the taskforce will primarily concentrate on specialised and supported housing solutions, specially tailored for middle-income elderly individuals while excluding care homes.  They have initiated the "Older People's Housing Taskforce - Call for Evidence" consultation in line with this.  Over the next 12 months, the taskforce will probe into this sector's challenges, facilitators, and prospective expansion areas, aiming to produce an independent report.  As members of the global engineering community, your expertise, innovative solutions, case studies and feedback are pivotal in guiding this call for expertise.

 

We have always championed the cause of harnessing technology and innovation to create a better society. Our reports on "Smart Homes for Healthier Ageing," "Decarbonising the Built Environment," "The Apollo Protocol," and "Digitisation for construction product manufacturers" are exemplars to our commitment in these areas.

 

Smart Homes for Healthier Ageing

The IET has always been at the forefront of technological advancements, ensuring that innovations are harnessed for the betterment of society. Our recent report, "Smart Homes for Healthier Ageing," is a testament to this commitment. It underscores engineers and technologists' pivotal role in promoting healthy ageing, emphasising the need for cross-sectoral collaboration to develop solutions that enhance well-being and quality of life as we age.

 

Decarbonising the Built Environment

Drawing from our extensive research and expertise in the built environment, we've also produced significant reports such as "Decarbonising the Built Environment." This report highlights the urgency of removing carbon from our current and future building stock, a crucial step towards achieving the UK's net-zero carbon economy by 2050. Carbon is not just an atmospheric concern; it's embedded in our buildings, from the materials we use to the energy consumed over a building's lifecycle. Addressing this requires innovative engineering solutions, market demand, and a shift in public perception.

 

The Apollo Protocol: unifying digital twins across sectors

Another noteworthy contribution is "The Apollo Protocol: unifying digital twins across sectors." This document advocates for a cross-sectoral framework aiming to harness the benefits of digital twins in both the manufacturing and built environment sectors. The Apollo Forum, as proposed, will be instrumental in formalising communication between these sectors, ensuring that digital twins developed in isolation today can seamlessly integrate tomorrow.

 

Digitisation for construction product manufacturers

Furthermore, our guide on "Digitisation for construction product manufacturers" offers a plain language insight into how manufacturers can structure and share data safely and sustainably. In an era where data is the new oil, ensuring its structured, consistent, and safe dissemination is paramount, especially in the construction industry.

 

Now, we seek your insights to enrich this dialogue further. And I would like to suggest those that have the expertise to delve into the consultation and address the key questions:

 

People

  • What are the most important issues the taskforce should seek to address regarding the needs and preferences of the ageing population?
  • Do you have specific recommendations for the taskforce to consider in this context?

Products

  • In terms of housing products and technologies, what are the primary concerns the taskforce should address?
  • Do you have innovative solutions or recommendations for the taskforce in this domain?

Places

  • How can we ensure that the local environments and communities are designed to support healthy ageing?
  • What specific recommendations would you suggest for the taskforce in this regard?

 

As part of the engineering community, our insights, innovative perspectives, and technical expertise can significantly shape the future of housing solutions for the ageing population. I would once again like to encourage everyone who can contribute to participating in the "Older People's Housing Taskforce - Call for Evidence" consultation. Together, we can help create housing policies and frameworks that are inclusive, sustainable, and truly beneficial for our elderly community. If you prefer, you may also share your responses privately with me at nmoreira@theiet.org.

 

Now, more than ever, your voice matters. Let's ensure it resonates in the corridors of healthy housing and urban development policymaking for a more inclusive future for our ageing population.

Parents
  • There are people living in purpose built sheltered housing owned and operated by Housing Associations who are having to self fund removing baths and installing accessible showers and baths, so they can live decently.

    So I cannot see where funding for these projects is going to come from if financial help is not even available for people who are struggling with simply keeping themselves clean.

    Will everything have to be self funded?

    It a bit of a specialist subject for me, having been working for three different walk in bath companies over the last six years literally all across England and Wales in all types of homes for customers of every race, creed and colour, I have worked in multimillion pound homes with both indoor and outdoor swimming pools, tennis courts, jetties to moor boats, right through to the other end of the scale homes that genuinely have compacted soil floors in some rooms, having been a farm building that has been partially converted into residential housing that is let to tenants, who were paying to replace the bathroom themselves with new laminated flooring being laid on the soil floor.

    The differences in the standard of living between people in this age range is immense.

    There is not much I don’t know about how people in this age range live and what their homes are like, indeed I am within the age range myself now, however I started the survey and abandoned it, I cannot determine what it is supposed to achieve and what would be a relevant answer.

Reply
  • There are people living in purpose built sheltered housing owned and operated by Housing Associations who are having to self fund removing baths and installing accessible showers and baths, so they can live decently.

    So I cannot see where funding for these projects is going to come from if financial help is not even available for people who are struggling with simply keeping themselves clean.

    Will everything have to be self funded?

    It a bit of a specialist subject for me, having been working for three different walk in bath companies over the last six years literally all across England and Wales in all types of homes for customers of every race, creed and colour, I have worked in multimillion pound homes with both indoor and outdoor swimming pools, tennis courts, jetties to moor boats, right through to the other end of the scale homes that genuinely have compacted soil floors in some rooms, having been a farm building that has been partially converted into residential housing that is let to tenants, who were paying to replace the bathroom themselves with new laminated flooring being laid on the soil floor.

    The differences in the standard of living between people in this age range is immense.

    There is not much I don’t know about how people in this age range live and what their homes are like, indeed I am within the age range myself now, however I started the survey and abandoned it, I cannot determine what it is supposed to achieve and what would be a relevant answer.

Children
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