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Tuesday 30 October 2012


Can India afford universal pension for the elderly?

New Delhi: NAC member Aruna Roy is leading the newly formed Pension Parishad to demand a universal pension scheme. The question is whether every elderly person in India who is above 60 years of age should be entitled to a pension.
The question was taken up by IBN18 Network Deputy Editor Sagarika Ghosh on her show Face the Nation.

Here's the transcript of the discussion with a distinguished panel:

Sagarika Ghose: Hi! Should every elderly person in India who is above 60 years of age be entitled to a pension? That is the demand by a campaign led by the Pension Parishad currently staging a five-day protest in Delhi. Now India is an aging society with numbers of elderly rising very fast. Is it time senior citizens, many of whom are no longer living with families, are taken care of by the state? So a demand for universal pension for all above age of 60, the senior citizens who are a totally neglected group and should this change because as we said the numbers of elderly is rising very fast. Joining us tonight is Nikhil Dey activist, MKSS, Co-Convener NCPRI, Sri Ram Khanna, Managing Trustee, Consumer Voice, Gautam Bhardwaj, Director, Invest India Economic Foundation/MD, Invest India Micro Pension Services, Gurcharan Das, former CEO, Procter & Gamble India & author. We also have celebrity senior citizen on our show tonight. I spoke earlier to filmmaker Shyam Benegal and asked him why he supports this campaign.

Shyam Benegal: The way the population on one level is aging and the other in the manner our society has changed over the years, you know older people now have less and less any kind of support system and this is happening in an alarming way all over the country. And I think Aruna Roy and her band of people are pinpointing on something which essentially is important because I think a lot of the older people are left with support because you know in our country it was always the children who looked after the parents but then the breaking up of the joint family and so on and then urban living, nuclear lifestyle, all those sort of things you know the toll is enormous on the older folks you know generally. So that's the reason I think because there has to be some kind of a safety net for older people in our country and that is missing at the moment.

Sagarika Ghose: But is pension the only thing the elderly need at the moment or see a range of other measures are also needed?

Shyam Benegal: Pension fund is one aspect of it, but there are so many other things; old age home now of course are absolutely necessary particularly you'll find that in urban India than anywhere else because see rural families still continue to... I mean there is still some kind of family support but in urban India the fact is there is no support at all and that is where the real problems are. Like, I can see in the city of Mumbai or for instance Pune, in places like these it far more serious than it ever was in the past and it is going to grow. Younger people are well reminded that they are not looking after their old would like to hide that fact but the fact is that this is a real problem and we have to face up to it. You know it is a social problem not just the problem of the government, it is a question of the society itself particularly the middle class of this country, you know the growing middle class of India needs to start looking it as a serious responsibility in terms of their familiar responsibility.

Sagarika Ghose: Right, that was Shyam Benegal on why he supports this particular campaign of Aruna Roy and Pension Parishad. We have Nikhil Dey from the Pension Parishad, tell us you have seen Shyam Benegal's concerns we have the statistics of elderly, 88 million elderly in 2009, 315 million elderly we will have by 2050, it is a big myth to think that we are a young country, we are a rapidly aging country. In that context what are you aiming to do?

Nikhil Dey: We are aiming to make sure that every Indian can live with dignity. To image that a citizen has worked for 40, 50 years of his life, contributed to the nation, contributed to the country and kept their body and soul body just on hard labour and when it comes to a stage when their bodies cannot support themselves, to say that they should be left alone and to die basically because that's what it amounts to is an absolute shame. To say that at a time when we are growing at the rate of six or seven or eight per cent is even worst. And to say that it costs too much money, does it costs too much money to feed yourself, does it cost too much money to provide basics and if we have large number of elderly than that is our main national concern. And I think it's very important that many group have come together, many who don't work on the issues of the elderly because we are seeing right across, we are seeing the numbers of people, it's quite right what you say it's not just pension but pension allows a variety of support system. You can't get water for yourself, you can't carry a matki, you can't go anywhere, you are not seen, heard, you can't live in a city like Delhi. There is no place for elderly to walk on the road, they'll be even crossing the road. So, somewhere we need to start understanding that as a nation what we are and what we need to provide for. And money, in fact countries poorer than India are providing universal pension schemes, you know Nepal is, South Africa is. We need to start thinking in a much more positive fashion.

Sagarika Ghose: There is no possible disagreement with the moral argument there, there can be no moral disagreement with Nikhil's argument there at all Gautam Bhardwaj but I want to ask you on the economic survey. There is the issue of our fiscal deficit, there is the issue of entitlements economy is impoverishing our exchequer, we have right to food, we have right to education. We simply cannot afford all these kinds of welfare. We also have the Pension Fund Regulatory Authority Bill, the pension reform bill which the government is trying to push through in order to reduce it pension liability, therefore given these huge numbers of elderly that we do have, the simple question – can the government afford it?

Gautam Bhardwaj: Well the simple answer is government, as things stand, can't afford it. But the larger question is that this elderly is not the static population as you very correctly said, where the numbers will continue to grow even if the Finance Minister was to pull out Rs 2-2.5 lakh crore and pay the bill this year. Can we be sure that the same amount will be available the next year and the year thereafter? If you are going to wake up suddenly let's say in 2030, the population that we are talking about is going to roughly 200 million people, not just 100 million people and the pension we'll be talking about at that stage will be Rs 10,000 per month not Rs 2,000 per month. So when you think of numbers like this I think the numbers become very staggering and I don't think these are sustainable numbers. I would think I can't fault Nikhil Dey on this question but I think it will need much more careful planning at the level of currently core and more importantly what we are seeing is the result of policy in action over the last 50 years.
Sagarika Ghose: The states had abdicated its responsibility towards the elderly for years but let me get you to respond to that, the bill is just too high.

Nikhil Dey: Ok if it is too high, what is reasonable? Rs 200 that is being given today and even that not been given to 80 per cent of those people. So, number one, can't we say that people don't have to go around clutching papers, taking photographs, running after to try and at least get that Rs 200. Then we can start saying, ok if not Rs 200, not Rs 2,000 then what is reasonable? What can we afford? Can we start that instead of saying that it's simply not affordable and can't do anything about it? And can we start understanding that there are huge people, there are human beings with lives, each one of them and they live amongst us and each one of us will reach that age and what gives dignity to us more affluent people is the fact that they have some degree of economic independence, something. So these are people with no other income.

Sagarika Ghose: So the only issue is that does it have to be universal pension or can it be access to health care? Could that be one way of looking at it? But let me bring in Gurcharan Das. Gurcharan Das India does not have a universal social security system, the current pension scheme covers only the employees only in the organised sector that is 12 per cent, 80 million Indians are not covered by any pension scheme whatsoever. Surely this is the crying need.

Gurcharan Das: Well surely it is a crying need and there are many crying needs in our society. You know the welfare state which this is a reflection of came into being after 200 years in the west of rapid economic growth and reaching an income level of $20,000 a year then those countries think about these sort of things and our income is $1500 a year, at least get to $5,000 a year. And you know the timing of this campaign is amazing because we are just been downgraded and the country is in serious financial crisis. Now, we are downgraded as a country and we are talking about this right now when we actually should be cutting back on the subsidies and you know it's not a moral issue. You are going to try to say oh he is not compassionate, I am compassionate, well know we are all either same in the world but let's be realistic and say what can we afford at this stage in our development? We are still a poor country, and a poor country cannot begin to behave like a rich country. So why give a pension of Rs 2,000, give a pension of a lakh of rupees that will give you more dignity.

Sagarika Ghose: Let me extend your argument to Sri Ram Khanna. Should then the state be not burdened with these kind of payments? Should the responsibility with the senior citizen be much more with the society, be much more with family, be much more with stake holders, that should we be pushing forward?

Sri Ram Khanna: See what our friend Gurcharan Das is saying is something of a senior citizen's cozy investments, monthly incomes coming from all over the place and he couldn't care less about that impoverish person who has nowhere to go, his family has abandoned him and he has no money for food, no money for shelter, no money for health care. You can't say wait on till India reaches $5,000 per capita income that'll be 20 years down the line and there are millions of people who need care today. So I am not saying you don't wait, you wait to put public money. But let me tell there are people in this country who have worked through their youth, never saved a penny and if they would have saved through out their lives they would have pension from their own money.

Sagarika Ghose: Let me just put that to you, you know we are speaking consistently of pension but you know as Shyam Benegal said there are old age homes, service providers to the elderly, service sector to the elderly, security to the elderly, now if those issues are taken care of then surely old age homes, service providers can be done on public-private partnership. If you are worried about the costs would you be satisfied or only pension is going to satisfy you and other ancillary measures are not enough?

Nikhil Dey: It's very interesting Sagarika actually we've been on the other side of the debate of cash transfers for a long time, pension is a cash transfer.

Sagarika Ghose: This time you are actually arguing for cash transfers.

Nikhil Dey: Yes, pension is an ideal cash transfer because it allows you to choose whatever you need, maybe Rs 2,000 is not considered reasonable by Gurcharan Das but for him to say we wait for 20 years is an amazing...

Sagarika Ghose: Gurcharan Das you argued that cut subsidies, instead give cash transfer as Nikhil is saying this is a cash transfer.

Gurcharan Das: I would say that now this is the time to cut subsidies like diesel, we have to cut subsidy on fertilizer and we have to make our nation affordable, you know first you must bake the bread before you begin to distribute it. Now, having said that let me say that I support RSBY, you Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana which is an insurance for health, universal insurance for health.

Nikhil Dey: It's not universal. It's just BPL.

Sagarika Ghose: It's just BPL actually.

Gurcharan Das: Ok, the point here is that not to quibble about but it is for the poor and the point here is that I support it because one, it is affordable and two, it is tangible and here in this particular case I would do it as a real exception. I would say we have to now think of a country which is going to grow and where people have to work not create bogus jobs as we create but real jobs. And that you get through growth, through hard work and not through entitlements.

Nikhil Dey: The people we are talking about have worked all their lives without any single entitlement, without any single subsidy, on their own hard work and they have contributed to this nation's growth rate and it is a complete insult to them to say that they have depended on some of the larger to survive but now they can't work their bodies don't help them to work. So, at that point only we should say that it is a payback, it is a cost that we should have made sure that they had adequate amount left over for a pension for what a pension is. It is a part of your working life later extended to security. This is not an entitlement or a dole of a different kind.

Sri Ram Khanna: This argument of pension insurance was actually used by the trade union movement in the 50s and the 60s. So you will find wherever labour was organised there was pension in the public sector, in the government employees unions, in the large companies they created a system for themselves and they forgot about the poor and everybody outside the system.

Gautam Bhardwaj: But it is a very expensive system

Sri Ram Khanna: It is.

Gautam Bhardwaj: We are speading 100,000 crore on pension.

Sagarika Ghose: Are we saying that we cannot afford any welfare to the elderly at all?

Sri Ram Khanna: You have to force everybody to put aside a part of their income every month into a pension fund. You have to force everybody.

Nikhil Dey: Why can't we force a part of that growth which is the income of the country why can't we look at the structure we have huge numbers, we have a huge country, we have to produce a simple system and we are not asking for the earth. Actually Rs 2,000 is just half of minimum wages, let's start talking about what's affordable, let's universalise it, let's make sure that no one is left without any kind of security and some degree where we can start thinking about how we deal with the large number of people everywhere. And I invite Mr Gurcharan Das to come just for 5 minutes to that Dharna where people have come and just talk to them and explain to them how they will wait 20 years.

Sagarika Ghose: How they will wait 20 years?

Gurcharan Das: I would love to go.

Sagarika Ghose: Let's put to Gautam Bhardwaj the question about the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority Bill, the PFRDA Bill which is now pending in Parliament. Now can you tell us within the context of the demand for the universal pension how this bill will help? Will this bill partially help, will this bill not help at all, how will this bill fit in this context?

Gautam Bhardwaj: I think the bill is an important bill, it will help at two level. One, it will enable and encourage people who are currently young and who can save for their old age, it will provide them a secure environment to achieve that. At the level of current demand which Nikhil and his team have I think the size of the population that is going to emerge, the next generation of the elderly some of them would have self provide for their old age and you'll find that instead of.

Sagarika Ghose: Even in the unorganised sector?

Gautam Bhardwaj: Yes, we are currently working with informal sector poor and we have half a million people who are putting aside Rs 1,000-2,000 a year.

Sagarika Ghose: Who are working in the unorganised sector?

Gautam Bhardwaj: Rickshaw walas, maids, vegetable vendors and others and these are about close to in 100 districts. This has started and PFRDA, the pension bill is trying to achieve that. It will not solve the problem for everybody, there are lifetime poor who can't save at all, there are dis-savers can't save, there are people already in their 50s who won't be able to accumulate enough money but it will still chip away at the problem so you won't end up with another 100 million elderly who are destitute in 2030, you probably will end up with 60 million or 70 million.

Sagarika Ghose: Right, you don't find this solution workable?

Nikhil Dey: A solution that covers half a million today no one objects to it but it's not a solution. A solution is one that covers most of your people you are concerned with and so today we have to do a minimum amount on the basis of... and after that we can say someone who has some level of...

Sagarika Ghose: But you are agreeable to not starting with Rs 2,000 per month but Rs 200 per month

Nikhil Dey: No, no I am saying today people are even fighting for that Rs 300 which the government gives today. Today, the first battle is to universalise, after universalising we feel and it's not unreasonable Sagarika if you think about it how much a person will require to survive? Rs 2,000 is not at all an unreasonable amount but if government and many others say that it's not reasonable then let's start talking about what is reasonable.

Sagarika Ghose: Rs 2,000 per person not per family?

Nikhil Dey: Yeah, Rs 2,000 per person because many are individuals living on their own so let's talk about
what's affordable.

Sagarika Ghose: So, let's universalise it then start talking about the figure?

Sri Ram Khanna: The starting point is that many state governments are already giving old age pensions, old age pension are being given in Delhi and a number of other states which he can tell you. But they are covering only a small number of people.

Nikhil Dey: Exactly.

Sri Ram Khanna: There are limitations to the budget, then only few selected people get it, they get it after bribing, they get it after running after the paper work, the things are already been done by the state governments which means governments are already allocating the money for this and it's not enough to cover everybody.

Gautam Bhardwaj: But I think there is an issue there which is that states are giving different amounts, Haryana is giving 1,000, Delhi is giving 1,000.

Sri Ram Khanna: The idea here is that if there is political intent in state governments then why can't we have a state policy about universalising this? And having a plan to implement it? Do it slowly, step-by-step.

Sagarika Ghose: Gurcharan do you believe that there is no need to think for pension at all or should we move incrementally in small ways slowly towards the national pension policy?

Gurcharan Das: No, of course it's a good idea but you know my only problem is that a nation must live within its means. If you read recent economic survey of India report, the World Bank report, the Standard and Poor's report which downgraded us, what they are all saying is that India is living beyond its means and I fear that we might have the kind of crisis that Brazil had in 1972 when it too began to live beyond its means and it went into...you had three decades, three lost decades for Brazil.

Sagarika Ghose: So you believe that this is premature and extravagant welfarism?

Gurcharan Das: But let me explain what I am saying is that in India government spending is already crowding out private investment and this is lowering our growth rate, the growth rate we were few years ago at nine has come down to 6-6.1 per cent in the last quarter. And each point you go down you have lost 1.5 million productive jobs, people who will support a family and so what I am trying to say here is...

Sagarika Ghose: Wealth creations not entitlement. Let's create wealth and not give out entitlement.

Nikhil Dey: Who can we afford? Can we afford the 5 lakh crore that we give in tax subsidy to the rich which is there written in our budget or can we afford what level of taxation in this country and the country Mr Gurcharan Das is talking about and in Brazil you have universal pension and you half a minimum wage.

Sagarika Ghose: So you are saying that what GD is saying is not right?

Nikhil Dey: Brazil has a fantastic safety net.

Gurcharan Das: Yeah, but Brazil have $10,000 income and they can afford it.

Nikhil Dey: Today, what can we afford? We can't afford $1400 which is their minimum wage. Can we have our elderly to die without the concern?

Sagarika Ghose: We cannot afford extravagant and premature welfarism. Nikhil Dey is saying we cannot let our elderly die, this is a polarised debate.

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Thursday 25 October 2012


Senior citizens get maintenance rights in state

To ensure the dignity of elderly people, the UP government has adopted the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007, which gives legal rights to senior citizens for seeking maintenance from their kin.
"The government has adopted the Act under which parents and senior citizens have been given the legal right of maintenance", said SP spokesperson Rajendra Chaudhary. As per the provisions of the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007, children of a senior citizen have the obligation to maintain them so that they could lead normal life. For childless elderly persons, the onus of their maintenance will lie on the relative who is in possession of their property or who would inherit the same. The maximum monthly allowance will be specified by the state government, Chaudhary said.

Under the Act, a provision of constituting a maintenance authority under the chairmanship of sub-divisional magistrate has been made, he said. Under the Act, parents and senior citizens would have the right to get maintenance of maximum Rs 10,000 per month and district welfare officer would be nominated as the maintenance officer.


The SP spokesperson said that along with the setting up of old age homes, medical services would be provided to senior citizens in the hospitals on priority. He said the government has launched Rani Laxmibai pension scheme in which people living below poverty line would get a monthly pension of Rs 400 payable in two half-yearly installments.


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Healthy Hobbies for old age people

Old age is a period of life that brings complete change in your life and life-style. The life changes entirely from a tough routine of job to a total free life. Now, there is more time to spend in leisure. At such stage many old age people get worried about how they consume their time. They just wander here and there with nothing to do. Such situations may cause depression and tension among old people that further results to many other diseases. Here is a brief review of various hobbies that can be used to pass leisure time in a good way.

These hobbies help to make these years as Golden Period of life. It is better to do something even in older days of your time because leisure time makes you ill, over weight and lazy. These are the root causes of many other diseases. So, you can select any part time job according to your convenience.

If you have joined a part time teaching job or delivering lectures per hour, you may do so if you are eligible.
Moreover, if you are physically fit and healthy, you can also serve as a caregiver.
You may also take some tuition at home. This will be more convenient option without going anywhere.
Furthermore, in the company of young students, you would feel young which would have a positive impact on you. It is very pleasurable to spend leisure time in some creative and constructive activity like remodeling a home.

If you have enough money to do this, you may go to the library and search different ideas in magazines. These ideas may be useful renovations in your garden or bedroom. Select sober textures and colors for your room because these will affect your mood and personality positively and will provide you to spend a day in a better way.

Another very important hobby of old age people is to play with small kids. This not only makes them happy but also gives them a lively feeling.

You may ask them to show their toys or you may ask what they want to do. You may also draw beautiful paintings with colors and crayons with them. This will give pleasure not only to little ones but colors may also add beauty for you as well.

Try different games with them and tell new and old stories with moral lesson to grow them positively. You can also share your good memories and experiences with them.

Another good way to consume time efficiently is to join some organization as a volunteer. You may work for their cause and support the institution with the help of your own experience. This will also give you a sense of satisfaction that you are serving people even in old age. Moreover, you will get a good chance to meet new people as well as you may learn many new skills that you have not tried before.

All this really helps you to spend your leisure time in a good and productive way. Another way to utilize your time efficiently is to worship God. You may also search and read useful material on religious topics that also coincide your taste.

Golf is the most common and widely accepted sports for old age people. The reason behind this is that it requires less physical activity. In old age many people get tired very easily with little work done. So, they usually prefer those sports that do not have so much muscular and physical activity. But you should remember here that if someone is physically fit and remain a good sportsman in his young and middle age, he might serve as a learned and skilled coach in any institution.


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Thursday 18 October 2012


“Celebrating Age”! India Expo 2012 (Active Ageing Retirement Expo series)
On 20th  & 21st  October 2012  at India Islamic Culture Centre -IICC
Lodhi Road next to Chinmaya Mission Delhi .
Time: 11.00am-7.00pm.  Entry Free

Encouraged by the success at Bangalore, Pune, Mumbai, Ahemedabad, Goa, Chennai and Hyderabad Celebrating Age India Expo 2012 is now set to launch at Delhi.

Vision India and International Longevity Centre India ILC-I India’s premier Institute in ageing in association with Times Ascent is launching “Celebrating Age”!India Expo 2012 in Delhi. This ultimate retirement lifestyle showcase would be held on on 20th & 21st October 2012 at India Islamic Culture Centre -IICC Lodhi Road next to Chinmaya Mission Delhi.Near India Habitat Centre. 
  
 “Celebrating Age”! India, the ultimate retirement lifestyles showcase, an Active Ageing Retirement series would be very significant in taking forward the agenda.

This event would be an eye opener for those in the age group of 50 plus. Housing, income security, health, wellness and many other issues will be brought centre stage at the two day Expo.

Statistics published by Helpage India and United Nations Population fund on International World Elders Day suggests that India had 90 million senior citizens in 2011 and is expected to swell up to 173 million in 2026.Given the above back ground Vision India a Market analytics firm in association with Patrons International Longevity Centre India in association with Times Ascent has launched the Active Ageing Expo series titled Celebrating age India Expo 2012 across eight cities in India. The objective is creating awareness about retirement as an important and significant phase of our life.

"Celebrating Age”! India Expo 2012, the ultimate retirement lifestyles showcase is Produced by Vision India a niche consulting and market analytic firm to propagate products & services to those aged 50 plus and    supported by International Federation of Ageing and International Longevity Centre India-  ILC-I India’s premier Institute in ageing as Patrons.

Countdown begins for India’s biggest ever active-ageing carnival - an action packed event designed to showcase activities that the elderly can participate to enrich their retirement lives. An active ageing Retirement Expo series

This event seeks to bring to the fore, the core areas of concern and of importance for senior citizens and provide them with the opportunities to lead a healthy and qualitative life of dignity in the golden eventide of their lives.

This Mega event is a pioneering initiative on qualitative ageing and productive human talent. Experience with exuberance trends and tipping points that are accelerating change in consumer attitudes of those aged 55 plus. This market segment has only touched the tip of the iceberg in terms of the growth potential.
  
Confirmed Participants:
  
Patrons: International Longevity Centre India ILC-I India’s premier Institute in ageing.
Anchor Sponsor : Paranjape Schemes (Construction) Ltd ( Athashri). 
Presented by: MetLife India Insurance Company Limited. 
Associate Sponsor: State Bank Of India (Reverse Mortgage)
Bronze Sponsor: TheGoldenEstate.com/UCC Care Pvt. Ltd. 
Supported by: International Federation Of Ageing, 
On line Media Partner:Silver Innings Foundation- Mumbai, 

Participating Banks: State Bank of India, Union Bank of India

Insurance: MetLife India Insurance Company Limited, Max Life Insurance Company Limited,  Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company Ltd., Star Union Dai-ichi Life Insurance Co. Ltd. 

Housing and Senior Living: Paranjape Schemes (Construction) Ltd (Athashri), TheGoldenEstate.com/UCC Care Pvt. Ltd, Saket Engineers (PRANAAM), GoldAGE Hospital Pvt. Ltd, Infra Housing Pvt. Ltd.,  

Supported by: SVYASA University, Callidai Motor Works, Silver Inning Foundation, Vasan Eye Care

Celebrating Age”! India Expo 2012An active ageing Retirement Expo series
20th  & 21st  October - Exhibition
at The India Islamic Culture Centre Lodhi Road New Dehli
Time11.00 am-07.00pm on both days entry is Free.
FREE EYE CHECK UP BY VASAN EYE CARE 11.30am-5.00pm on both days
11.00 am
Programme Saturday Oct 20th   2012

Inaugural Session
Swagatam Dance by Students of Kalakendra Delhi
Brief Introductions by:
Presenting Sponsor: MetLife India Insurance Company Ltd.
Associate Sponsor: State Bank Of India (Reverse Mortgage)
Bronze Sponsor: TheGoldenEstate.com/UCC Care Pvt. Ltd.,

Healthy & Qualitative Ageing
12.30pm -1.10 pm
Ms. Mala Kapur Shankardass, Associate Professor Sociologist, Gerontologist, Health & Development Social Scientist

Prof. Vinod Kumar,Emeritus Professor,
Dept of Medicine, St Stephens Hospital ,Delhi
1.15pm-1.45pm
‘Group Dance by students of Kalakendra Dwarka
2.00pm-2.45pm
‘Reiki’ by Hariharan Iyer , Reiki Grandmaster
2.45pm-3.30pm
Awareness talk and Demo on Physical Fitness and Wellness
3.15 pm- 3.45pm
Satsang by Sri Sri Art of Living
3.45 pm-4.15pm
Laughter yoga by Dr.Santosh Sahi
4.15pm-4.45pm
Scientific Yoga by SVYASA University
4.45pm -5,15pm
Instrumental concert  by students of Kalakendra
5.15pm-5.45pm
 Rajyoga Meditation by Brahma kumaris
5.45pm-6.30pm
 Laughter Therapy by Neelam Wadhera -General Sec. Delhi Laughter Club

Programme Sunday Oct 21st   2012
11.00am-11.45am
‘Reiki’ by Hariharan Iyer , Rekie Grandmaster
11.45am-12.15pm
Scientific Yoga by SVYASA University
12.15-12.45pm
Awareness talk and Demo on Physical Fitness and Wellness
12.45pm-1.30pm
Laughter yoga by Dr.Santosh Sahi
1.30pm-2.00pm
Tabla Vadyan by Students of Kalakendra Dwarka
2.00pm-2.30pm
Company presentations
2.30pm-3.00pm
Group Kathak dance by Kalakendra Dwarka
3,00pm -3.30pm
Satsang by Sri Sri Art of Living Delhi
3.30pm -5.00pm
Group song by Students of Kalakendra Dwarka
5.00pm-5.30pm
Talk on How to Age Gracefully by Bramhakumaris
5.30pm -6.30pm
Past Life Regression by Aryan Yoga

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Monday 8 October 2012


Do take it to heart

State spending on health can’t keep pace with cardiac diseases. Making the right lifestyle choices is the best preventive and a cost-effective solution

Non-infectious diseases such as heart disease and cancers kill more people in India than all other causes of death put together, with heart disease taking the lead with 2.5 million deaths annually. It shows no bias and is the leading cause of death across age, gender, incomes, regions, and urban and rural India. No matter how old you are, how rich you are or where you live, heart disease — which causes heart attacks and strokes — is more likely to kill you than any other disease.

There are subtle variations, though. It is more likely to kill men than women: 20.3% of all male deaths are caused by heart disease and stroke as compared to 16.9% deaths in women, shows data from the Registrar General of India’s study of One Million Deaths in India, which uses country-wide Sample Registration System and verbal autopsy — asking the family about the sickness, symptoms and treatment, especially if the death took place at home — to identify the cause of death. Then there are regional variations, with deaths being the highest in the more affluent states of Goa, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Punjab, compared to Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Rajasthan.

The projected cumulative loss of national income due to loss in productivity because of early death from noncommunicable diseases for 2006-2015 is $237 billion. By 2030, this productivity loss is projected to double. This is far greater than the corresponding loss in the US, which has a population a fourth the size of India’s. Add to this India’s expenditure on healthcare — around 4.1% of its GDP, only 26% of which was government funding — and you have millions of people pushed to poverty just to pay healthcare bills.

The sliver of hope in this litany of bad news is that over 90% of heart disease depends on how we live our lives, our stresses, what we eat and how active we are. Of course, genes have some role to play, but nine in 10 heart attacks can be prevented by controlling blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes; eating high fibre-low fat food; staying fit; not smoking; and managing psychosocial factors such as stress. Early detection and treatment of hypertension (chronic high blood pressure), for example, reduces death from heart attacks by 35-60%.
And it’s never too late to start. Even adopting four healthy

Don’t miss a beat behaviors — eating at least five fruits and vegetables daily, exercising for at least 2.5 hours a week, maintaining a healthy weight, and not smoking — after 45 years reduces the risk of heart disease by over one-third, reports a study in The American Journal of Medicine. The study found that these changes lowered heart attack risk by 35% and death from heart attacks by 40% in people between 45 and 64 years. The benefits were there even for those who lived a decadent life till they decided to turn over a new leaf and tread the path to health.

The heart-protective benefits begin the moment you make healthy choices. The nutritional plan for a healthy heart is eating less of saturated fats like butter and more of oils such as olive and mustard oils, eating five or more servings of fruits and vegetables a day; six or more servings of whole grains such as wheat and brown rice; low-fat milk products; legumes and beans; and fish and lean meats.

But making diet changes alone are not enough to keep the heart healthy and people need to have high activity levels, keep weight in check and not smoke. Smoking is the biggest cause of heart attack in young people with no other risk factors because it increases the risk of clot formation in the blood, which can block arteries and cause a heart attack even in healthy people. A review of heart disease incidence in 21 countries reported in the journal Tobacco Control showed that smokers had a five times greater risk of heart attack than non-smokers.
Obesity also perpetuates a chain of risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, each of which individually boosts the risk of heart disease. Keeping the body mass index (BMI) between 22 and 23 — a little lower than the internationally recommended cut off of 25 — lowers a person’s heart risk substantially. BMI is calculated by dividing a person’s weight in kilograms by the height in meters squared.

The reason why Indians need to keep their weight lower than Caucasians is our warped fat distribution. A Canadian study of four ethnic groups — South Asians, Chinese, aboriginal populations and Caucasians — showed that for the same level of body mass (weight), South Asians had more body fat. All South Asians also accumulate fat around their abdomen, which is the worst possible place to put on weight. A waist size larger than 38 for men and 35 for women may be a sign of the metabolic syndrome, which is characterized by a group of risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure, elevated trigycerides, low good cholesterol (HDL) and high bad cholesterol (LDL), and a pro-inflammatory state (elevated levels of C-reactive protein in the blood), showed study on ‘Waist circumference cutoff points and action levels for Asian Indians’ in the International Journal of Obesity.

With diseases outpacing government spending on health by giant leaps, prevention is the only practical way to save the country from an avalanche of medical bills.

Thursday 4 October 2012


Ensure a life of dignity for the aged: Pranab

President Pranab Mukherjee on Monday called for measures to enable the elderly to lead a life of “dignity.”
Speaking at a function organised by HelpAge India to mark the International Day of Older Persons, Mr. Mukherjee expressed concern over the growing neglect and abuse of seniors in the country.

Mr. Mukherjee said: “I have to confess my deep alarm and dismay in this context over the findings of the 20 city survey conducted by HelpAge which reveals that one out of three elders have faced abuse. It is even more shocking to learn that those surveyed describe their sons and daughters-in-law as the primary abusers. Many report such abuse as having continued for more than five years and most do not complain to anyone in order to uphold family honour.”

The President pointed to the withering away of family values and expressed hope that the shocking revelations about elderly abuse would serve as a warning.

“We must do everything possible to ensure that our elders can live a life of dignity, enjoying the best of medical attention, economic security as well as emotional stability. Our culture, history, traditions, religion and philosophy all enjoin us to respect our elders and to fill their lives with abundant love and affection.”

To the nation, with a very large young population, the President’s message included a reminder, “…India is what it is today because of the contributions made by our elders in their youth. If those hands steadied you when you learned to walk, then you need to support them when they need help and hope there will be others who will do the same for you when you grow old.”

“It’s just another phase”

“Society and the government should be sensitised to the fact that old age is just another phase of life with its special needs and characteristics just like childhood and youth,” the President said, adding that efforts should be made to provide health care and economic security to the aged.

“The real challenges that lie in the field of health security are accessibility and affordability of medical health facilities. The elderly require special geriatric care… their medical expenses increases with age whereas their income decreases or remains static. Private hospitals are reluctant to provide concessions to the elderly and insurance companies unwilling to insure the elderly,” he said.

“Proud to be an elder”

Earlier, the President made a reference to his own age and urged the elderly to refrain from thinking of old age as an inhibitor.

“I turn 77 a few months from now. Our honourable Prime Minister has just celebrated his 80th birthday. Ms. Lata Mangeshkar celebrated her 83rd birthday a few days back. Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer is going strong at the age of 97, intellectually vibrant and deeply concerned about the welfare and progress of our nation. Many more illustrious persons can be added to this list, but I stop here… There is in this audience and all around us a large number of elders who are making extremely valuable contributions to our country and to our society. I salute them and am proud to be one of them, an ‘elder’ leading a productive and fruitful life.”

The President said with advancement of medical science and technology, age is by no means a disabling factor. Quoting W. Somerset Maugham and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the President encouraged the elderly “to get out of a ‘retirement mentality’ and think about old age as a second innings.”