Being able to access flexible work is as important to older workers as it is working carers. This might enable flexibility around caring responsibilities but equally can help workers manage health conditions or simply working fewer hours if that is something people can do and want to do in later life.
Recent research from Carers UK showed that in the community, pharmacies were considered to be the most carer friendly organisation/service, with public transport and services like banking being the least. For many of the communities we work with you could replace the word “carer” with “age” and these findings would also ring true.
But we’ve certainly seen instances where well running public transport and banking services are making the community more, rather than less age-friendly. When local bus providers receive age-friendly training to better understand the needs of their older customers, we’ve seen changes to the way staff support customers or even drive their buses. When banks still have a physical presence on the high street not only can they provide a non-digital alternative, but also a vital social touchpoint, especially for people who may be living alone.
What can be done?
Across the UK Network of Age-friendly Communities people are working to make their communities both age and carer friendly. In Norfolk, carers organisation, Carers Voice Norfolk and Waveney, have joined the Age-friendly Breckland steering group as a core member. They’ve been working collaboratively at local events to promote their carers handbook to older people who may not even realise they are a carer.
In Age-friendly Middlesborough, this week their age-friendly coffee morning has focused on carers, encouraging conversations about caring as well as promoting local support.
And vice versa, in Ceredigion their local carers magazine has been promoting their age-friendly forum, ensuring that older carers have a voice in shaping the work to make their place more age-friendly.
At a local level there can be challenges to managing the requirements of what makes a community age-friendly and carer friendly, alongside dementia-friendly, child-friendly and many other worthwhile programmes. But in many cases the changes that are needed to ensure communities are accessible to all are similar, as are the people and organisations who can make those changes.
This Carers Week at the Centre for Ageing Better, we invited Carers UK to present at our weekly UK Network of Age-friendly Communities Peer Call. The discussion gave us all much food for thought and has certainly motivated me to seek out more opportunities to highlight the needs of older carers in our communities programme, as we work towards creating a more friendly society for everyone.