Age needs one voice. Now it has:
Age UK is the new force combining Age Concern England and
Help the Aged in England.
The new force combining &
Social Care eligibility thresholds briefing Revised 17 January 2012 (PDF, 300KB)
Winter Warmth (PDF, 128KB)
This is a general introduction to facts and figures about older people in the UK and around the world:
A presentation by Martin Prince, Centre for Global Mental Health, King’s College London. The presentation covers facts about chronic diseases mainly in low and middle income countries, and focuses on dementia, including work done by the 1066 project.
This presentation, by Liz Sutton, Donald Hirsch, and Katherine Hill from the Centre for Research in Social Policy, is about older people's experiences with living on low incomes. Our introduction has some statistics about this group of people in the UK.
A presentation by Professor Paul Higgs from UCL, about past, present, and potential future courses of issues around how we think of and experience 'later life', including policy implications.
A presentation with facts and figures about care homes, and information about My Home Life, by Julienne Meyer and Tom Owen.
A presentation given by our Chief Executive, Tom Wright, at the Agenda for Later Life conference 2011.
The presentation given by our Charity Director, Michelle Mitchell, at the 2010 conference.
This presentation is a summary of the Equality Act 2010 and its effect on people in later life.
Note: We are making all of these resources available to you free of charge; in return, please acknowledge us in any publications when using our material.
Stay in touch with all the latest Policy and Research news with our monthly newsletter
These factsheets, which are regularly updated, are the most up-to-date sources of publicly available, general information on people in later life in the UK and internationally.
Downloads
A download is a document (like a research report, a leaflet, or an application form) that can be transferred from our website to your computer. You can download a file, view it on your screen, print it, or save it to your computer.
PDF stands for ‘portable document format’.
Most downloads on this website are PDFs. We use this format to ensure that the document looks the same on everyone’s computer (website pages, by contrast, appear differently depending on how people have set their computer up).
Computers use a program called Adobe Acrobat Reader to download PDFs. If you try clicking on a link to download a PDF and it doesn’t work, you will need to install Adobe Acrobat Reader onto your computer.
The process is quite straightforward and is free.
PDFs cannot be changed. If you need to be able to type into a downloaded document (for example, if we are offering a letter template that you need to put your name on) we will provide it as a Microsoft Word document rather than a PDF. You can then download it, type into it and save it to your computer.
Downloads will open on your computer in a new browser window.
Inside this window (below all your web browser menus), there will be a toolbar with options for you to print or save the document.
Close the browser window to return to the Age UK website.
We have made every effort to make our PDFs accessible to screen readers. Here is an overview of your accessibility options available in Acrobat Reader. Please ensure that you have downloaded the latest version of Acrobat Reader from the Adobe Reader website to ensure that they are included in your version of the programme.
You can use Adobe Reader to read a PDF out loud with the following shortcut keys:
You can also convert a PDF into a web page by following these steps:
You can convert a PDF document into a text file for use with other software and hardware such as Braille printers by opening the PDF and choosing ‘Save as text’ from the File menu.
Set the appearance of this website so you can read it more easily
To see information relating to Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales set your preference below: