Welcome to english.eastday.com.Today is
Follow us @
Contribute to us!

Latest

Shanghai

Business

Culture

China

World

Pictures

Topics

Life

Services

Home >> auto >> Article
Education, engagement key to preventing problems
From:ChinaDaily  |  2021-09-16 10:46

For the past year, Shangguan Zirui has been zealously engaged in an urgent task. She has worked long hours to steer her retired, widowed mother and her peers in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, through the digital jungle of smartphone apps laden with disorienting ads.

The 34-year-old said her intention is to bolster digital literacy among some of the fast-aging residential communities in Chengdu. She hopes to ensure that these less tech-savvy seniors can also ride the wave of China's sweeping digitization drive.

The mobile internet has transformed almost every aspect of life in the past decade, with the greater convenience offered ranging from online payment systems to free navigation to food deliveries.

Now, Shangguan is considering putting on the brakes a little because of addiction concerns.

"I have asked my mom to limit her smartphone use," she said. "I have suggested that she uses her smartphone in the morning and meets friends in the afternoon."

She heads a local startup that focuses on developing social programs for seniors. Many of the programs are rolled out in partnership with local authorities in Chengdu, where almost one in five of the 20 million residents is age 60 or older.

Shangguan has noticed that the highly algorithm-driven, seemingly endless feed of cuisine-related short videos has had her mom, Hu Qiao, glued to the screen as she loves to cook and try new recipes.

Hu also feels agitated about not keeping up with messages-mainly neighborhood gossip, articles on preserving her health and discount ads-that stream in chat groups on WeChat, which she uses to track the latest news and other items, according to her daughter.

Last year, Shangguan spearheaded efforts to educate older adults about the basics of smartphones and the all-encompassing mobile internet. She said the moves were motivated by an existential threat facing seniors in China's highly digitized society.

Faced with the stringent restrictions imposed after the COVID-19 outbreak, many older people struggled to produce a health code-a digital pass that indicates the holder's risk of infection based on their travel history-at checkpoints on streets or when attempting to make online appointments with doctors to avoid crowds.

Concerns about the digital divide gained traction nationwide and prompted the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology to roll out a campaign to bolster online inclusivity for seniors this year.

The drive put misleading ads in the crosshairs and also ordered developers to offer streamlined versions of their user interfaces.

Shangguan compared the campaign to "stepping on the gas", but she noted that now the time has come to "press the brake".

She said internet addiction is not an exclusively teenage issue, and urban retirees-many of them "empty nesters", who live apart from their adult children and are prone to loneliness-are also falling prey to addictive behaviors.

As such, she was concerned that excessive internet surfing can have severe health consequences. In response, she offered a solution: more ways to help seniors to have a decent social life in retirement.

Shangguan said the inadequate supply of educational and entertainment programs, allied to legal obstacles that bar aspiring retirees from the job market, are partly responsible for internet addiction among seniors.

Media reports said retirees have scrambled to enroll at colleges for seniors-government-funded institutions that target older people-due to a surge in demand.

Employers are technically unable to give formal jobs to older people because they cannot open social security accounts for workers who have passed retirement age.

As China "grays", politicians are discussing reforms that will allow older people to make themselves useful, such as raising the retirement age and encouraging older people to offer their services on a voluntary basis.

Shangguan and her colleagues have stepped up the design of community-based educational programs that teach calligraphy, dancing and painting.

She said the essence of such programs is to provide a place for seniors to socialize.

"I would bet few people in their 70s and 80s are expecting to pick up many skills at older people's colleges," she said. "They just need a place to meet people their own age and find a long-lost sense of belonging."

The programs have taken a foothold in 10 communities in Chengdu so far, and Shangguan said she wants to see the coverage triple this year.

Share