I think I'll start by saying that with regard to what the agency does to help seniors prevent and manage chronic diseases, we do that in partnership with a variety of other organizations--I mentioned some of them--but also, of course, and really importantly, with the provinces and territories.
We find that we can be most helpful in bringing information to the table around what works in prevention and what are the effective practices. For instance, the guidelines for physical activity for seniors provides a really good basis on which other organizations can develop their own programs.
Falls prevention is an area where the agency has invested considerable time and resources. If seniors are concerned about falling, they can't be active, can't be part of their communities. Developing falls prevention curricula, for example, where we are ensuring that health professionals are getting trained, ensuring that caregivers are getting information, and ensuring that seniors themselves are aware of what they can do to prevent falls, has been a really fundamental piece of the work we've done.
I'll come back to the age-friendly communities example, because I think it's a really good one in the context of the whole-of-society approach to prevention that I referenced earlier in my remarks. When communities are engaging seniors and when seniors are involved in helping plan the services and supports they need, then they're able to participate actively in their communities.
We were very heartened to see, when we read the report on seniors by Dr. David Butler-Jones, that seniors are reporting that they're in good health, they're engaged in their community, and they're feeling included, all of those things. The initiative for age-friendly communities is one that spreads that possibility much more broadly. We've been very much focused on measuring the outcomes in age-friendly communities so that, again, we can share good data and therefore convince others of the value of applying these approaches in their own communities. Working with the seniors council through our minister's role, with the HRSDC minister, also allows us to bring health issues to the table and engage seniors at that policy level in helping to shape the policy agenda going forward.
I would also say that issues around seniors and seniors health get embedded into all of our programs. Our surveillance programs look at seniors health. Our prevention programs focus on what we can be doing to better equip seniors. We ask this question as a lens on everything we do.
That group in the population is always front of mind to us. They are not only recipients of services, they're also providing services themselves--in the work they do in their own communities, in the ways they teach younger people about how to live in our country and the joy they get from that role.
So we bring a lot of the social side of health into how we deal with seniors issues in our programs.