If you knew your workforce was going to experience changing
risks, increased exposure, longer recoveries from injury and greater effects
associated with co-morbidities, you would act!
The fact is, our workforce is changing and few organizations are even
aware of the change let alone the consequences.
[This post contains slides and content arising from my
presentation to the Occupational
and Environmental Medicine Association of Canada (OEMAC) Scientific Conference
September 2016].
The aging population is not just a North American
problem. The median age of the
population in most industrialized countries is projected to rise
dramatically. I adapted the following
Pew Institute graphic to include Canada and Australia but its message is
clear: over the next few decades, the
median population age of many of the most important economies in the world is
going to rise.
For Canada, the US and Australia, this shift to an older
population will not be limited to the median age. Populations of older people are growing while
birth rates are low or falling and immigration levels stagnant. Because demographics drives the demand for
goods and services and provides the supply of workers, changing demographic
patterns are altering the character and needs of the population, the labour
force, the economy and more.
Demographic change drives both the supply of potential
workers and demand for goods and services.
The Canadian population, for
example, is growing at about 1% per year overall. The working age population (18-64) is growing
at about the same rate but the oldest and youngest segments of the population
have very different profiles. In the
last decade, the population over the age of 65 has risen by more than a third
and is nearly 50% larger than it was in 2001.
On the other hand, the population ages 0 to 17 years of age has actually
declined over the same time frame.
Canada’s population projections all point to a continuing
trend toward an older population. The Canadian population will rise by a little
more than 5 million in the next thirty years but the increase in the population
over age 65 will account for nearly 90% of that growth.
Already we are seeing skill shortages in several sectors and
regions related to this demographic change.
I mentioned the population over the age of 65 has risen by about 50%
since 2001 but the numbers continuing to work full time have risen by 350% over
the same time. Part-time work for those
over age 65 has also risen by about the same percentage. Full and part-time work for those over 70 has
also risen by more than 250%.
This trend is also evident in Australia:
"The majority of Australians intend to retire between 65-69 years, but the results show that now over a quarter of males 45 years and over plan to work past 70 years.” [Australian Bureau of Statistics, Australians intend to work longer than ever before, Media Release 40/216, 29 March 2016]
The trend toward more workers being engaged in full time
work beyond age 65 is particularly evident in the US data. I recently extended published US data to
capture more recent developments that show full time employment dominates among
those working beyond age 65.
We are not only seeing an increasing number of older workers
in the economy, but the distribution of even the category of older workers in
some industries is trending toward the upper age limits of recorded data. For example, I used Canadian Institute for Health Information CIHI data on registered nurses and nurse practitioners (RNs and NPs) as an example and found that the
distribution of those aged 70 and older has double in the last decade.
By about 2030 under most projections, the category of
persons aged 80 and older will outnumber any other 5 year age group in our
population. This has implications for
the demand on care services, healthcare, housing, transportation and many other
aspects. One example of this trend is
the dramatic rise in Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs), a profession highly
associated with care for the elderly and disabled. In the last decade, the number of LPNs has
risen with the older population while the supply of RNs and NPs has tracked
closer to the growth rate of the population aged 18 to 64.
Of course, people who decide to go into nursing or
healthcare of any sort are needed but that also means they are unavailable to
become electricians, truck drivers, educators, researchers, programmers and
construction workers—occupations that are also necessary to the growth and
maintenance of our economy. The problem
of limited supply of youth and a falling birth rate means these roles are going
to have to be filled by others. We are
already seeing a dramatic rise in the working population over age 65 but this,
too, has its implications.
Working longer means greater exposure to hazards, greater
risk of injury and complications due to comorbidities and conditions related to
normal ageing. How prepared are
employers and safety professionals to address these changes? Are workers
adequately aware of the risks? Are
safety professionals and employers aware of changing risk profiles of older
workers? Are there appropriate ergonomic
tables to provide guidance on strength and repletion limits for older workers? Do workers’ compensation laws adequately
address work careers that may extend into their seventies, eighties and
beyond? Are health and safety systems
capable of addressing risks associated with older age groups not previously
prevalent in your workplace?
There is a lot of evidence that work is good for your health
and wellbeing. That applies to older
individuals where work can provide income security, mental stimulation, exercise,
socialization, and opportunities to “give back” or do something meaningful and
productive with one’s time. Moreover,
many workers approaching retirement age today have skills, knowledge and
experience that are just not available in the labour market. These factors and the demographic changes
noted above mean we are seeing more older workers in the workplace—a trend that
will continue for more than another decade.
It is not too late to act.
Understanding the changes is the first step… and perhaps a self-serving
one: chances are, if you are working
today, you will be working to an older age than your parents or
grandparents.
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