COLD CAN KILL
The UK is the 'poor man' of Europe when it comes to looking
after its elderly population during the winter months, according
to British Gas/Help the Aged Partnership.
As part of its campaign to end the scandal of cold-related
deaths, the British Gas/Help the Aged Partnership commissioned a
survey by Ipsos MORI to explore the comparative attitudes and
behaviour of older people in the UK and Sweden during the winter
months.
Sweden has colder winter temperatures, yet a far lower rate
of excess winter deaths.
The research points to the fact that people in the UK are
more worried about fuel bills compared to income, despite higher
fuel prices in Sweden.
Key differences between the UK and Sweden reveal:
- UK pensioners are considerably more concerned about the
cold.
- More than a third of the UK's 9.6 million over 65's are
dreading the cold this winter. (34 per cent compared to 20
per cent)
- UK pensioners are four times more likely to avoid
heating rooms like their bedroom, bathroom or living room.
(20 per cent against five per cent)
- A third of UK pensioners are worried about being able to
afford their fuel bills this winter. (34 per cent against
eight per cent)
- Over half of UK pensioners wear extra layers of clothes
at home to keep warm, compared to only a quarter in Sweden
(53 per cent against 26 per cent)
- Nearly twice as many people in the UK worry about
getting out and about in winter. (37 per cent against 20 per
cent)
This research follows the government's latest figures on the
number of cold related deaths last winter, many of which could
have been prevented, with over 25,000 people in the UK over the
age of 65 dying from cold related illnesses.
"The research illustrates how pensioners in the UK are
getting a raw deal," said Steve Jones, Director of
Communications and Marketing, Help the Aged.
"We know that they are hampered by low incomes and poor
housing, and this is impacting dramatically on their standard of
living and quality of life. We cannot stand by each winter and
watch them waiting for a 'death sentence'.
"When you consider that currently £4 billion goes unclaimed
in benefits each year by older people, it is not hard to make
the connection that this money might be put to good short-term
use to benefit vulnerable older people.
"Imaginative government thinking on improved heating and
insulation for everyone, affordable environment friendly
technology or, at its simplest, a pension that reflects the real
costs of an acceptable living standard, would go a long way to
alleviating the misery older people presently suffer.
"It is quite disgraceful that we remain the 'poor man of
Europe' in the treatment of our older population."
The British Gas Help the Aged Partnership is calling on
government to take urgent action if it is to meet its commitment
to eradicate fuel poverty among vulnerable groups, which
include older people, by 2010.
Currently over one million householders in the UK over the age
of 60 live in fuel poverty. It warns that time is running out.
The Partnership wants to see:
- Free central heating and insulation for all pensioners -
as is the current practice in Scotland. In England it is
currently means-tested
- Raise the Winter Fuel Payment or the Basic State Pension
to take account of rising costs of living older people face,
including the increase in fuel costs.
- More investment in new technologies for homes, such as
affordable 'greener' renewable energy alternatives in homes
where insulation cannot be fitted. Currently 50 per cent of
UK homes occupied by 'fuel poor' people do not have cavity
walls that can be insulated, or live in solid wall dwellings
which are difficult to insulate.
"This data provides us with important new findings which can
help inform the fuel poverty debate in this country." said Kevin
Pringle, British Gas Help the Aged Partnership spokesperson.
"In a very real sense, excess winter deaths are a very
British disease. We know the hardship that older people face in
the winter. That is why we have a long association with Help the
Aged to provide practical measures to ensure the most vulnerable
older people receive help.
"The Partnership's 'The cold can kill' pack, for example,
which gives tips, advice and contacts to help them cope with
winter, has been widely disseminated and our Benefits Advice
Pilot programme has recovered over £6 million in extra benefits
for older people."