Govt will continue to support families, including growing group of seniors: PM Wong at PCF Family Day
The PAP Community Foundation (PCF) Sparkle Care in Yew Tee has become their almost-daily haunt since the centre opened in 2022.
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said on July 13 that PCF has been stepping up in senior care, in line with government efforts to provide more support to this segment of the population and to partner organisations to do so.
The Government will continue to support families in Singapore at every stage of life, he said at a PCF Family Day event held at Singapore Expo.
Recent initiatives include financial support and parental leave for young parents with newborns, and more help for large families with three or more children.
'But these days, when we talk about family support, it is no longer just about supporting young parents with children. Because these days, our society is getting older,' said PM Wong.
With an ageing population, providing family support has to also include seniors and their caregivers, he added.
The authorities have started work on this through nationwide initiatives Healthier SG and Age Well SG, meant to keep seniors active, engaged and healthy for as long as possible, he noted.
They are also stepping up care services, such as at long-term residential facilities and at community nodes.
'A lot of this work has just started. There is still much, much more to do, and we will share more of our plans when we are ready,' said PM Wong.
He added that the Government will need partners – such as social organisations and agencies like PCF – to also play their part.
PCF is a charitable organisation founded by the People's Action Party, which PM Wong leads as its secretary-general.
PM Wong noted that PCF is already expanding its capacity to serve more seniors. A previous report said PCF will have 25 eldercare centres – senior care centres and active ageing centres – by 2027.
Madam Tan, 74, and Mr Ng, 73, are among more than 10,000 seniors currently served by 13 existing centres.
The couple have seen improvements in their general health, such as their posture, and have also made many new friends since becoming active participants at the Sparkle Care in Yew Tee. They came to know of the centre when a staff member approached them at their door.
Madam Tan, who used to just take occasional walks in the park with friends for exercise, was intrigued by the karaoke, K-pop dance and Rummy-O sessions.
When her husband retired from his job as a taxi driver, he was convinced by her to join in.
The pair have since tried out unique activities like drone soccer and are part of an informal group of senior gamers called Yew Tee Gamers. In drone soccer, players pilot drones enclosed in protective cages and score by flying the 'striker' drone through a circular goal.
They are currently training for a Counter-Strike 2 competition in October with a seniors-only category.
'We will be learning how to play Street Fighter next, and (my husband) is very excited,' said Madam Tan, in Mandarin. Street Fighter is a popular arcade game that is now available across consoles.
In his speech, PM Wong said PCF can play a unique role of fostering intergenerational bonds, as it also runs many kindergartens and childcare centres. With more eldercare centres, PCF will have more opportunities as an operator to bridge generations, he added. The theme of July 13's PCF Family Day event was Bridging Generations, Inspiring our Future.
PCF also raises funds to support different causes in the community, he added. The foundation is donating $60,000 to six charitable organisations covering seniors, children, low-income families, single mothers and those in need of mental health support.
The organisations are Blossom Seeds, Bright Hill Evergreen Home, The Salvation Army Gracehaven, Food from the Heart, HCSA-SPIN and Club Heal. Each received $10,000.
'Families have been at the heart of our nation-building journey since the very beginning,' said PM Wong.
Going forward, Singapore will be embarking on its next phase of nation-building post-SG60, he added.
'In this new phase, we will face new and more complex challenges. But I am confident that we can weather these challenges, and we can emerge stronger together.'
Source: The Straits Times © SPH Media Limited. Permission required for reproduction
Discover how to enjoy other premium articles here
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
I'm terrified of rabies, my Gen Z daughter fears climate change. Why anxiety is generational
Last month, I was convinced I had rabies. I didn't have any symptoms, or I'd hardly be sitting here writing this, but I was getting occasional intrusive flashes of panic that I was incubating the dread, 100-per cent-fatal virus that can first show symptoms months after exposure. My partner and I had been on holiday in Vietnam a few weeks before. As we were leaving a guesthouse in Ninh Binh, a friendly pet puppy skittered up behind me and lightly nipped my leg through my trousers. Now, there is rabies in Vietnam – 82 people died of it in 2023 – and you don't only get it from street dogs; it lurks even in puppies who seem playful. I weighed the evidence. I hadn't been vaccinated against rabies; most tourists don't bother because the jabs are expensive, and there is a 'post exposure' option if you do interact with a rabid animal. But because the skin on my leg hadn't been broken, I decided I was almost certainly going to be okay, carried on with my holiday, and basically forgot about it. Then, a few weeks after our return, the news was full of the terrible story of Yvonne Ford, a 59-year-old woman from Barnsley, who had died from rabies after being scratched by a puppy while on holiday in Morocco in February. Only scratched! Ford had started experiencing symptoms just two weeks prior to her death on June 11. Upon reading this, I started to worry – albeit in a controlled way. Should I get the 'post infection' set of jabs which would save me from certain death if I had been exposed? Was it worth the not insignificant £500 this would cost? Or should I just live with the very tiny risk? To add to my squirming brain, around this time there was a hostile incident between India and Pakistan, which the media always helpfully refer to as 'nuclear powers.' This brought back my teenage fear of nuclear war, of dying slowly of radiation sickness, as fed by such terrifying 1980s fare as the films Threads and The Day After. It really was Apocalypse Bingo for a while there, earlier this summer. I talked to my daughter, Annabel, 22, about what she made of my paranoias, and we started to explore the subject more deeply. I shared my Generation X fears: nuclear war, Aids – back in the day, at least – and rabies. (Who could forget those scary public information campaigns and screaming, red La Rage posters on cross-channel ferries?) Annabel, who is firmly Generation Z, told me she was worried about her economic future, 'brain aneurysms and freak deaths – I think this definitely comes from reading too much health journalism,' but most of all, climate change. 'Fears about climate change do occasionally keep me up at night,' she said. 'The heatwaves have been making me worried about the coming decades. It is clearly already happening. I think due to modern life we all forget how reliant we are upon the environment. Although the anxiety maybe isn't productive, I do think we should all be more concerned about climate change.' Why anxiety sticks with us I asked Owen O'Kane, a psychotherapist and the author of the bestselling book Addicted to Anxiety, what he made of all this. To a certain extent, the 'flavour' of our fears is due to what was making headlines at a formative period in our lives, he believes. 'Fashions change and we go through phases, your experience as an early adult stays with you,' he says. 'News headlines certainly don't help. The people who write them go for the worst-case scenario, the most catastrophic outcome. If you are anxious by nature, your 'anxious self' will gravitate towards these headlines.' If you tend towards anxiety, these more dramatic incidents are likely to affect you compared with an individual who is more sanguine. 'Anxious people are responsible people and they care deeply about things,' says O'Kane. 'They have a healthy altruistic core.' The problem, however, is that there's a risk anxiety can affect your life in a negative way. 'Your anxiety is like a watch guard, looking for a potential threat, and you might suddenly fixate on this threat,' says O'Kane. 'For example, a teenager might see a photo of a field of fire, and start worrying about climate change after a period of not thinking about it.' At heart, says O'Kane, anxiety is all about how much a person can tolerate the uncertainty of everyday life. 'To be worried is useful and has a function, to some degree,' he says. 'But it becomes a problem if we become obsessive, or avoid going out, for example. Every person has to do a cost-benefit analysis – where the price is not leading your life, and you become 'addicted' to your anxiety.' These days, says O'Kane, many people are 'frightened of our own shadow. 'The presentation and triggers are different, but these existential fears are actually our psyche asking fundamental questions: 'Will I get ill?', 'Will I die?', 'Will anyone help me?' 'Will I cope?'' And for our children's generation, the triggers are everywhere. 'People who are now in midlife didn't have social media,' says O'Kane. 'There was less exposure to world events. Yes, we knew there were wars and starvation and plane crashes; we were not unaware of these. But young people have a more elevated awareness of what's going on globally. It's not surprising that there are heightened levels of anxiety in Generation Z.' How social media fuels modern fears Annabel agrees with this analysis. 'Most of my fears are because of the news and social media, which allow little nuggets of anxiety to interrupt your day,' she says. 'Your phone pops up and it's another thing to be worried about, because that's what we engage with.' O'Kane suggests that anxieties can fluctuate, both in a negative way – in that they become harmful phobias – but also in a positive way, in that you can learn to manage and overcome them. I certainly concur with this: my teens and 20s were a mass of health anxieties, usually involving dread neurological diseases, all without a logical explanation. As I grew up, I learnt to keep a lid on these worries and defuse them. So, how did I resolve my rabies scare? First of all, I looked up the statistics of how many people had died of rabies in the UK after a foreign trip: six people between 2000 and 2024. I spoke to my sister-in-law, a GP, who reiterated my chance of contracting the virus was infinitesimal. I then texted the guesthouse in Vietnam, who told me the puppy had been vaccinated against rabies and was healthy. (I have to assume they were telling the truth.) As I received this reply, I was looking at my phone while crossing a road and almost got hit by a car. When I related the above to O'Kane, I was thrilled to have passed his 'healthy response' test. 'The situation was that you were bitten by a dog and there was rabies in the area,' he says. 'It's not dissimilar to how people felt during Covid. I wouldn't describe this as an irrational fear, but a 'situational one'. 'The context of your worry was normal and your parameters went up, you identified the trigger,' he says. 'Someone less prone to worry than you would have made the decision this was low risk and not worried at all afterwards. But you did the healthy thing for you – looked at the broader evidence, weighed it up, and let it go. You were able to acknowledge you could tolerate the worry. Someone more prone to worry would have been googling furiously, or have gone for the vaccinations.' O'Kane is at pains to point out that not all anxieties should be dismissed. 'I'm not saying you should tolerate all uncertainty, and there are useful, functional worries,' he says. 'For example, if you've had unsafe sex with someone you know is HIV positive, you should take the sensible medical approach and seek treatment.' And in less critical situations, we can lower our exposure to worrying material. 'I've gone off social media, and I'm feeling a bit better about everything,' says Annabel. 'It was overwhelming though, because there's so much online encouragement to optimise and do better – very Gen Z.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more. Solve the daily Crossword

Wall Street Journal
7 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Stocks to Watch Tuesday: UnitedHealth, P&G, Whirlpool, Stellantis
↗️ UnitedHealth (UNH): The under-pressure healthcare conglomerate will report its first quarterly results since pulling its financial guidance and replacing its chief executive in May. Shares, which have shed more than 40% this year, rose in premarket trading. 🔎 Procter & Gamble (PG): The consumer-goods company is also due to report earnings. P&G said Monday that operations chief Shailesh Jejurikar would replace Jon Moeller as CEO from next year. ↘️ Whirlpool (WHR): The appliance maker cut its annual profit guidance and lowered its quarterly dividend. It said competitors have flooded the market with Asia-made products to beat the expected increase in tariffs. Shares skidded in off-hours trading.


Medscape
8 hours ago
- Medscape
Obesity-linked Liver Cancer Preventable, but Rising
At least 60% of liver cancers globally are preventable through risk-factor reduction, including obesity-linked metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and cases caused by viral hepatitis or alcohol consumption. That's a key message from a new Lancet Commission report on addressing the global hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) burden, published online on July 28 to coincide with World Hepatitis Day. The burden of new liver cancer cases is projected to increase to 1.52 million, and liver cancer-related deaths are projected to increase to 1.37 million by 2050, the commission pointed out. In addition, the share of liver cancer cases caused by metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), a severe form of MASLD, is expected to increase by 35% (8%-11%) by 2050. The commission called for increased public, medical, and political awareness of the rising risk for MASLD — especially in the US, Europe, and Asia — with a focus on high-risk groups, such as those with diabetes and/or obesity. With the number of new liver cancer cases predicted to double over the next 25 years without urgent action, the Commission set a target for an annual reduction of 2%-5% in the number of new cases. This could prevent up to 17 million liver cancer cases and up to 15 million deaths, if achieved. 10 Recommendations Overall, the commission suggested 10 strategies for reducing the global burden of liver cancer and improving patients' quality of life. These include: 1. Strengthening viral hepatitis prevention, screening, and treatment, including integrating hepatitis B virus vaccination into national immunization schedules and targeted hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening. 2. Reducing alcohol consumption using 'strong government-led measures,' such as warning labels and advertisement restrictions. 3. Controlling environmental risk factors, especially exposure to contaminated water and aflatoxins in food in low- and middle-income countries. 4. Preparing for the increase in MASLD and MASH with tailored national strategies for awareness, screening, and management. 5. Raising awareness of liver health among policy makers and the general population. 6. Improving early HCC detection by optimizing the performance of surveillance tests and technologies. 7. Standardizing noninvasive diagnoses of HCC with standardized criteria for interpreting imaging studies. 8. Addressing East-West differences in clinical management through collaborative efforts of professional organizations and the pharmaceutical industry to achieve consensus and a clear action plan. 9. Improving HCC survivorship through research, clinical documentation of outcomes, complications and treatment response, and integration of palliative care in the early phases for patients in need. 10. Facilitating access to treatment for HCV and HCC, which currently is limited mainly due to high cost and lack of cost-effectiveness. Zeroing in on Obesity The rate of MASLD-linked liver cancer is expected to rise over the next decade, particularly in the US, Europe, and Asia, due to increasing rates of obesity, the report authors warned. In the US, MASLD prevalence continues to climb in parallel with the obesity epidemic; by 2040, over 55% of US adults could have MASLD, the commission predicted. 'Liver cancer was once thought to occur mainly in patients with viral hepatitis or alcohol-related liver disease,' commission author Hashem B El-Serag, MD, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, commented in a press release. 'However, today rising rates of obesity are an increasing risk factor for liver cancer, primarily due to the increase in cases of excess fat around the liver.' El-Serag suggested including screening for liver damage into routine healthcare practice for patients at high risk for MASLD, such as individuals living with obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. 'Healthcare professionals should also integrate lifestyle counselling into routine care to support patients to transition to a healthy diet and regular physical activity,' he said. 'Furthermore, policy makers must promote healthy food environments via policies such as sugar taxes and clear labelling on products with high fat, salt, and/or sugar.' In a related editorial, The Lancet editorial board concluded, 'The message of the Commission — that strengthening prevention, fostering collaboration, and removing social and knowledge barriers can help avert the rapid rise of liver cancer — is one of possibility. Taking action to realize that possibility is vital for the health of many millions of people worldwide over the next 25 years.' The Commission was supported by grants from the Natural Science Foundation of China, Noncommunicable Chronic Diseases-National Science and Technology Major Project, and Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project. A list of authors with competing interests is available in the report.