Introduction

As with most other advanced economies, England’s population is ageing. Over the past 20 years the proportion of the population aged older than 65 has risen from 16% to 18%, with almost 50% (or 440,000) more people older than 85. This trend is expected to continue. Over the next 25 years, the number of people older than 85 is projected to nearly double from around 1.3 million to 2.6 million.

The fact that we are living longer is something to be celebrated. Increased life expectancy means we have more time to spend with friends and family and to enjoy life. Older people make a valuable contribution to society, including through continued employment, informal care for grandchildren and other relatives, and volunteering. However, as people get older they also face an increased risk of developing health conditions and becoming frail. This may lead to an increased need for health and social care support – a contribution we explored in the 2020 REAL Centre publication, The bigger picture.

The rate at which we develop additional health and care needs as we age is important for two reasons. First, these needs can affect our quality of life, and so the longer they can be delayed the better for individuals. Second, the rate at which we develop health and care needs by age, influences how an ageing population will affect demand for health and social care, and therefore costs. Our report Health and social care funding projections 2021 considered the funding pressures generated both from an ageing population and rising chronic conditions. If the prevalence of health and care needs for each age group were to fall over time (for example, if 65 year olds have fewer needs in 10 years’ time than 65 year olds today), this could counterbalance funding pressures driven by an increase in the number of people living into older age. By contrast, if each cohort were developing more needs, this would add to the funding pressures from a changing size and age structure of the older population.

About this report

This report focuses on two of the ways in which ageing can affect our lives that are closely linked with our need for support from the health and social care systems: limitations on activities of daily living (ADLs), such as showering and eating, and diagnosed long-term conditions, such as dementia, diabetes and coronary heart disease. We focus on the population aged 65 and older, as this is when measures of this type begin to rise most steeply with age.

ADL limitations approximate social care need, at least in terms of how it is currently measured by the system. For the purpose of this report, we will use the terms ADL limitations and social care need interchangeably, while acknowledging that, more broadly, ADL limitations are an incomplete proxy for social care need. Long-term conditions are diagnosed by the health service, and result in demand for both primary and acute NHS services. The aim is to highlight the complex relationship between ageing and health and care need, and to explore how the relationship between ageing and need can change over time and what this means for total population-level need. We then provide insights for policymakers planning for the health and social care need of the future.

In chapter 2 we document the relationship between age and our two measures of need: ADL limitations or social care need and long-term conditions. In chapter 3, we explore how the relationships between age and our need measures have changed over time, and how these changes have influenced total population need. Finally, in chapter 4, we explore the relationship between ADL limitations and long-term conditions, including how this has changed over time.

We have two main sources of data. The first is the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) – a cohort study of people aged 50 and older in England. These data include self-reported ADL limitations and long-term conditions up to 2018. The sample is drawn from the population living in the community and therefore does not capture people with social care needs living in residential care. We do however supplement our ELSA analysis with information on the size of the residential population using data from LiangBuisson. The second is primary care administrative data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), which provides information about diagnosed long-term conditions up to 2015.

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