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The new force combining Age Concern logo & Help the Aged logo

Information & advice

 
 
Woman on the phone
Information and Advice is an independent, confidential service which plays a crucial role in improving the quality of life. It enables people to secure their rights and entitlements, make informed choices about public services and play a full role in their communities and society.

Recent publications and reports

Here are a selection of recent and important documents. For related Age UK publications please use the search box below to carry out a more comprehensive search.

opens link in new window Transforming lives report (PDF 485KB)

opens link in new window Take my advice report (DOC 495KB)

opens link in new window Involve, Engage, Empower (PDF 2MB)

opens link in new window Information and advice evidence review (PDF 947KB)

What Age UK does nationally

  • Offers advice for professionals on providing Information & Advice to older people
  • Provides a range of information guides and factsheets
  • Provides information and advice by telephone and by mail
  • Covers a wide range of issues including welfare benefits and money, social care, health, employment, consumer, housing and discrimination
  • Offers a casework service on housing rights around tenancy and sheltered housing issues
  • Is available to older people, their family and carers and professionals and organisations working with older people
  • Supports local Age UKs in providing quality Information and Advice services 
  • Manages projects to provide benefits advice and planning for retirement locally

What Age UKs and Age Concerns do locally

  • Information and advice provision at a local level will depend on funding available
  • Some Age UKs and Age Concerns can provide information only and signpost to other advice services available locally
  • Others can provide information, advice and ongoing support and casework
  • The service may be provided by telephone or face to face and some are able to offer home visits
  • Information and advice includes welfare benefits and money, housing options, social care and health and local services

Keep up-to-date

Stay in touch with all the latest Policy and Research news with our monthly newsletter

Useful download

  • Download our Services for Later Life 2012 programme and booking form:
    opens link in new window Services for Later Life conference and booking form PDF (314 KB)
    Help with downloads

    Downloads

    What is a download?

    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.

    What is a PDF?

    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).

    How do I download a PDF?

    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.

    How do I install Adobe Acrobat Reader?

    The process is quite straightforward and is free.

    1. Go to opens link in new window http://get.adobe.com/uk/reader/
    2. Click ‘Download’.
    3. Wait for the window to offer you the option to ‘Run’, then choose this option.
    4. Click ‘Next’.
    5. Click ‘Install’
    6. Wait for the window to offer you the option to ‘Finish’, then choose this option.

    How do I change a download?

    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.

    How do I print or save a download?

    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.

    Can my screen reader read PDF downloads?

    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:

    • Read the document: Shift +Ctrl+Y
    • Read the open page only: Shift +Ctrl+V
    • Read to the end of the document: Shift+Ctrl+B
    • Pause: Shift+Ctrl+C
    • Stop Shift+Ctrl+E

    You can also convert a PDF into a web page by following these steps:

    • Copy the URL (web address) of the document (right-click on the link and select ‘Save target as’ or ‘Copy link’).
    • Open the Adobe online conversion tool in your browser and paste the URL into the URL box.
    • Tick the HTML box on the Format option and click ‘Convert’.

    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.

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