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The issue of elderly care is becoming increasingly important in both "developed" and "developing" countries alike as population structures change, and the trend towards ageing populations gathers momentum. This text presents a diverse range of progressive programmes from all parts of the world for the care of elderly people, ranging from community care schemes to fitness and income generation.;This book should be of interest to students of gerontology, as well as government planners and international agencies/charities concerned with ageing, and health care providers and planners.
Normandy 1944. Like most of his comrades Ken Tout was just 20 years
old. Not until many years later did he feel able to gather their
memoirs in three Hale books, "Tank!", "Tanks, Advance!" and "To
Hell with Tanks!". Now these adventures are condensed into this one
continuous narrative. Follow the ordinary young lads of the
Northamptonshire Yeomanry through the massive enemy defences on
Bourguebus Ridge, to the snows of the Ardennes, to the night
crossing of the River Rhine, and finally to Grote KerkI, where they
celebrated with liberated Dutch citizens. They were not
professional soldiers but young conscripts willing to 'do their
bit', knowing that their Shermans were outgunned by the enemy's
much heavier Tiger and Panther tanks. "By Tank: D Day to VE Days"
vividly recalls, in one complete volume, the whole experience of
battle with utter authenticity: the fear, confusion, boredom,
excitement and grief.
The increasing life expectancy seen in developing countries has
coincided with massive migrations due to urbanization,
industrialization, and disasters, both natural and man-made, to
cause acute physical and psychological suffering for many old
people and their dependents. In this study, Tout takes the first
in-depth look at this phenomenon and proposes a new approach to the
special needs of the elderly in developing countries. Describing
successful national programs already in place for the elderly, he
highlights lesser-known difficulties, such as the responsibilities
grandmothers may have to assume in the face of
heterosexually-transmitted AIDS, and the consequences of the
disintegration of the traditional extended family in countries too
poor to provide pension schemes.
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