Fact No 1
900 000 – This is the number of Baby Boomers that will retire from the workforce and enter their silver years from the year 2012. This population is more than a quarter of the current citizen population. This is the statistics provided by the National Population and Talent Division. This Age Pyramid provided by the board of statistics in Singapore, shows that the first batch of baby boomers is now hitting the retirement age of 65.
Fact No 2
10 – 10 Years - Singapore’s life
expectancy has increased by 10 years over the last 3 decades: from 72 years in
1980 to 82 years in 2010. This is the statistics also provided by the National
Population and Talent Division. The life expectancy trend below as provided by
the CIA world factbook, 2011 shows how rapidly our life expectancy has
increased since 2000.
Fact No 3
0.78 – Singapore
has a fertility rate of 0.78,
statistics provided by CIA World Factbook. It is the average number of
children that would be born per woman during the child bearing years. This is a
figure that is down from 1.16 in 2000. The chart below shows the decreasing
trend of our country’s fertility rate.
President and fellow TMs, based
on the facts that I have just mentioned, we can draw a simple conclusion. Our
beloved country Singapore is aging, and it is aging most rapidly. The social
and economic implication that is associated with this problem is humongous. How
do we adequately provide for the needs of this large aged population when we do
not have enough younger population to share the costs and the burden?
This is a problem that is best left to the right government authorities,
afterall, as individuals, we cannot do much to help with these social and
economic problems… or can we?
My fellow toastmasters, tonight I
would like to appeal to each of us to do our part as individuals, on a specific
aspect of this whole aging population problem. Support the building and
establishing of nursing homes in our neighbourhood. Our government’s mandate is
for every constituency to have one nursing home by 2013 in order to cater for
the demand. However, in the last one year we hear of news that people are
protesting against the building of nursing homes in their estates.
In May 2012, the Straits Times
published an article where the residents of Bishan said No to having a nursing
home built in their neighborhood. In Feb of the same year, the residents of Toh
Yi estate protested against the same. In Feb this year, the people of Yew Tee
estate raised the same concerned as well. Why? The May 2012 article has this to
say on the protests from the residents of Bishan:
One resident
was quoted - Our children play football there. If there is no football field,
they will play in the void deck and stain the walls.'
Another
resident said 'the old folk will be groaning right into my home'. And add: 'If
their kids are going to skirt their responsibility and dump them (the aged
parents) there, then they can travel farther to visit them.'
The residents
argue that if the home is set up, air flow to their homes will be blocked and
they will have to use the air-conditioner more often to dispel the heat.
Really? The
government is tackling the problem aged population, and we are concerned with
air cons and stained walls? It may seem trivial but this article demonstrates
the underlying misconceptions towards nursing home.
Misconception No 1
Nursing
homes are for abandoned parents whose children are irresponsible and extremely
unfilial. In an Asian and Confucius-influenced society that values filial
piety, people used to be ashamed of leaving their parents in a nursing home.
The stigma associated with nursing homes remains deep rooted among us. In
reality, our society and way of life has changed so much since the olden days
of “three generation under one roof”. The modern life is now an all-consuming,
day-to-day challenge as we juggle work and raise a family in a frantic world
filled with competitions that we cannot afford to lose. We could only provide
our parents with a decent home and we visit them over the weekend once a while.
What will happen when both parents reached the age where they needed round the
clock help to perform their daily activities? This is the question that many
working professionals may also face sooner or later. Asian values, Confucius
teaching, filial piety. In this day and age, it is not a question of value, but
a question of practically and necessity.
Misconception No 2
Nursing
homes are cold, dark, lonely places filled with sad old people waiting for the
inevitable outcome of life. This is a scene off the Chinese soap drama. It is
no longer true in this day and age. A very basic service provided by nursing
homes run by Ministry of Health include medical care, nursing care, physiotherapy,
dietary services and dental care for their residents. Some nursing homes even
provide for special needs like dementia and psychiatric conditions. The
privately Pacific Healthcare nursing home in Bt Merah extends their services to
provide diverse recreational and social activities, including regular visits
from volunteers that positively contribute to the psychological well-being of
our residents. The Salvation Army Peacehaven Nursing Home in Changi, claimed to
be a “home within a home” where residents live in a home-like environment with
their own rooms. The centre even provides guided autobiography sessions that
allowed residents to share their life stories with staff and fellow residents
before their memories fades. This is a picture of a cold, dark, lonely place?
Certainly not. In fact, it sounded like a place where the residents are
well-taken care of both physically and psychologically.
Ladies and
gentlemen, it is high time we dispel with such misconceptions of nursing home
and face the problem of aged population, with a clear understanding of what it
takes to tackle this problem as a mature society. Nursing home is a necessity
and a reality. It is a place with trained care-givers that performs a better
job at meeting the needs of the elderly under a comfortable and conducive
environment. What more can we ask for? As one very wise resident from Yew Tee
said in the newspaper article: "We're all going to grow old one day.”
Taking care of the aged paves the way of us when our turn comes in the future.
Have a hand in shaping the decision that would affect us ultimately. Start now
and support the establishment of nursing homes in your very own estate.
This is a
speech delivered at Toastmaster Chapter Meeting, for Advanced Project 5 - An
Abstract Concept. It is a topic that is close to my heart, one that I will face
in the not-too-long future.
Evaluation -
the presentation of the statistics at the start of the speech needs to be
clearer, better so as to be more impactful.
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