Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Shades of grey
Planning for old age now includes looking after parents as well as ourselves
Remember when "Freedom 55" defined the perfect retirement?
What began as an advertising slogan to make financial planning seem more sexy became a life dream, fed by images of silver-haired, carefree seniors reaping the rewards of their life's labours on sun-drenched beaches and manicured golf courses.
Related Items
The idea was that if you planned it right, you could make the pursuit of leisure a full-time job and literally sail through your golden years.
It was probably a good idea at the time -- before modern science started pushing life expectancy well beyond the biblically allotted span of "three score and 10" (70) years.
But, to quote an aging prophet, "the times they are a-changin'." And with them comes an urgent need for baby boomers to plan for a retirement that could last in excess of 25 years -- and include their parents.
Canadian life expectancy, which has increased steadily since 1979, has now reached 80.4 years. And it continues to rise. The number of centenarians (4,635) alone is up 50 per cent from 1996.
Our population is greying rapidly -- a record one in seven Canadians is 65 and older -- and for the first time in history, Canadian adults have more parents than children.
Rather than sailing off into a golden sunset, however, we're heading into a "grey wave" that experts warn could turn into a "long-term care tsunami" unless we face the fact that at some point we're going to find ourselves either giving or receiving care -- most likely in our own homes.
OK, so who wants to talk about growing old and increasingly dependent?
"Surveys tell us that most people would rather clean a toilet than discuss this issue," says Patty Randall, a Vancouver author and national "care-years" consultant.
"I've started calling home care a 911 issue for Canadian families because I get enormous amounts of email from boomer children, where the subject line is 'Help!' and from young seniors, who usually begin 'Please let me know what services are available for me to stay in my own home.'"
It's going to be a No. 1 topic for decades to come, says Randall. Her 600-page guidebook, Let's Talk -- The Care Years: Taking Care of Our Parents/Planning for Ourselves, chronicles her own 20-year journey as a "care guide" for both her parents, as well as her husband and, currently, her mother-in-law. (Her website is www.longtermcarecanada.com.)
The age wave is cresting. According to a recent national survey by Investors Group, 69 per cent of Canadians aged 43 to 69 still have at least one living parent or parent-in-law, compared with just 16 per cent in 1960. More than a third of them are already providing parental care.
It'll crash in 2035, Randall says, when the boomers are clustered around age 75 and start needing help with daily living themselves. And given the growing trend toward "aging in place," she adds, they're going to want to remain in their own homes as long as possible by having family and friends provide much of their informal care and, perhaps, help pay for extra in-home support services.
Randall cautions against relying on the government to pick up the slack. "Home care is not, and never has been, a guaranteed service under the Canada Health Act," she says, "and neither is nursing home care. They're extended care services" (governed by provincial and territorial legislation).
Ideally, long-term care should be a partnership between the government and families, says Randall, just as retirement is a partnership between you (your RSPs, personal savings, private pension) and CPP. (She suggests adding long-term care insurance -- her book calls it "a 21st-century product for Canadians -- to the mix in your 40s.)
Freedom, not fear, should be our motivator for planning for the "less-than-glamorous" stage of life, Randall says.
"The whole thing about care is you have to want choices. And increasing your choices, your freedom and your quality of life, that's the whole point."
carolin.vesely@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 17, 2009 D1
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
The comment period for this story has ended.
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Life & Style
-
CON >< CUSSIONS
Examining hockey head injuries
-
Random Acts of Kindness
Your encounters with goodness
-
Open Secrets
Red River students mine government data banks
-
Ski with WFP
Register here to ski Asessippi with the Winnipeg Free Press
-
Miss Lonelyhearts
Maureen Scurfield offers life advice
Poll
Most Popular
- Freedom for Li expected
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- 'Smoking gun' misfires, gangster acquitted
- RCMP rescue driver from winter road
- Teachers' fate still on hold
- It was a holiday experience, nothing more
- He can escape her verbal abuse
- Prairie proliferation
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- From poster couple to problem couple
- Freedom for Li expected
- Manitoban wheelchair-user badly beaten in Australia
- Mild again, but enjoy it while it lasts
- Six-year-old leads RCMP to attacker
- Off-duty officer stops assault on Transit driver
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- Musician's mother dies
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- Not wrong, just illegal
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Students could be punished
- Is this the worst Olympics ever?
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- Mr. Matas a worthy nominee
- What should happen to two teachers who performed a sexually suggestive dance routine in front of students?
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Freedom for Li expected
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Teachers' fate still on hold
- 'Smoking gun' misfires, gangster acquitted
- It was a holiday experience, nothing more
- He can escape her verbal abuse
- Autobins attract more trash
- TB rate among aboriginals 'an embarrassment'
- Mayor Katz to visit 'homeless' students
- Freedom for Li expected
- Greyhound apologizes for stranding passengers
- He can escape her verbal abuse
- You can't keep grandpa from seeing baby despite childish family dynamics
- Liberals say cutting MP mailings would save $10 million a year
- Explore drug aids before giving up sex
- Lesbian teen faces classmates after school cancels dance over her request to bring girlfriend
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- No more quick fixes: mayor
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- MP may regret taking aim at Christian youth centre: Mayor Katz
- Students could be punished
- Police shoot and kill suspect
- Freedom for Li expected
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- More ominous issue underlies Youth for Christ flap
- Wielding a weapon costs a life
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- Youth centre sparks dispute
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Condos at ex-Penthouse
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Prairie proliferation
- Looking for small victories in the Mideast
- Freedom for Li expected
- Teachers' fate still on hold
- Saving fellow albinos from killings in Africa
- 'Smoking gun' misfires, gangster acquitted
- Socialism for the rich is Tory way
- Manitoban wheelchair-user badly beaten in Australia
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Indian Act changing to treat descendants equitably
- Condos at ex-Penthouse
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- Ice-cutting machine to stay submerged until spring
- It's the Sharks vs. the Jets in a jazzy rumble
- Iceland airline bullish about Winnipeg
- Text of Shane Koyczan's opening ceremonies poem, "We Are More"
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Cabela's to open across Canada
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Online drug pioneer tumbles
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- Not wrong, just illegal
- No listings for buyers flooding the housing market
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
PREVIOUS

0 Comments