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Neglect of Older People in Humanitarian Response 

Unni Karunakara 

Senior Fellow, Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, Yale University 

author contact: unni.karunakara@yale.edu 

 

Abstract 

Adapted from Keynote Address at the Association for Anthropology and Gerontology conference, Florida 

International University, Miami.  February 7, 2015. An earlier version of this paper titled “Humanitarian 

assistance for older people: does it matter?” (June 2012) was presented to Doctors Without Borders for 

discussion, and later published in PLoS Medicine (December 2012; 9(12):e1001357) as “Ending Neglect of 

Older People in the Response to Humanitarian Emergencies.”1 

Keywords: humanitarian aid, emergency response, disaster, global health

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Vol 36, No 1 (2015)    ISSN 2374-2267 (online)    DOI 10.5195/ aa.2015.94     http://anthro-age.pitt.edu 

Neglect of Older People in Humanitarian Response 

Unni Karunakara 

Senior Fellow, Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, Yale University 

author contact: unni.karunakara@yale.edu 

 

In times of humanitarian crises and complex emergencies, our TV screens and mailboxes 

fill up with funding appeals.  Charities raising funds to respond to emergencies tend to rely on 

images of malnourished babies and winsome children to raise funds.  There is something about 

threats to the very young that awakens the protector in all of us.   

 This focus on the very young is perhaps a natural reflex, yet we mustn't allow it to blind 

us to the needs of older people.  As a doctor and a humanitarian worker, I want to challenge our 

sense that when emergencies arise, we should always focus first on the needs of the very young. 

At the heart of humanitarianism are the principles of humanity and impartiality—the 

belief that all human beings deserve a life of dignity, and that all have equal value.  It would run 

counter to these principles to exclude someone on the grounds of nationality, religion, politics or 

gender.  I believe it is time we add to this list, asserting that it also violates the humanitarian 

ethos, to exclude people on the grounds of age.  We have an ethical imperative to respond to the 

needs of older people on the same principled basis as we respond to those of children and 

younger adults. 

Why does it Matter?   

There are practical reasons why humanitarian actors such as Doctors Without 

Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) must ensure that older people’s needs are addressed in 

a humanitarian response.  Older people make up a significant and growing number of those 

affected by humanitarian crises, and yet they are not sought out, much less prioritized, within the 

humanitarian response.  

Yet older people play a key role in household livelihoods, both with their labor and with 

financial and material contributions.  They usually remain economically productive for as long as 

they are physically and mentally able, and for as long as household requirements demand their 

contribution.  In addition, the contributions of older people to family and household duties 

enable other household members to find employment and income for the household.2   

Perhaps the most vital role that older people play in household economies is in caring for 

other vulnerable people, especially children. This is particularly the case in areas where the 

parent generation is missing because of AIDS, economic migration, or conflict.   

In the case of AIDS, limited data makes it difficult to quantify the prevalence of such 

“skipped generation” households, but HIV prevalence, the mortality rates of the middle 



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generation, the number of orphans and the role of extended family structures all suggest that 

many older people are caring for children in sub-Saharan Africa.3 

Similarly, high rates of migration to cities or even other countries in search of work often 

mean that children are left in the care of grandparents. There are reasons to believe that a child 

who has a grandmother has a better chance of surviving and thriving; studies show that care by a 

maternal grandmother improves the child’s nutritional status and increases chances of survival.4 5   

Last but not least, older people contribute their accumulated experience, knowledge and 

understanding.  This insight not only makes them a valuable resource for their communities, but 

also makes them important potential partners in designing and implementing humanitarian 

programs.  

In order to be principled, practical and relevant, humanitarian agencies must ensure that 

they are able to provide the assistance that older people need, and to which they are entitled.  

What is “Old”?  

There is no general agreement on the age at which a person becomes old.  In developed 

countries, the threshold tends to be 65 years.  For the UN, the agreed cut-off is at 60 years, but in 

developing countries, where the majority of humanitarian crises take place, we see that 50 or 55 

years is perhaps more appropriate.6   

The use of a calendar age to define old age assumes equivalence with biological age, and 

the two are not necessarily synonymous.  It is more accurate to understand old age as a relative 

category, construed in different ways according to a person’s role and status in the community.7   

In areas of the world where people do physically taxing labor, do not have adequate healthcare 

and have a low life expectancy, chronological age is less significant than physical condition as a 

marker of aging.  A lifetime’s exposure to health problems, environmental pollutants such as 

cooking smoke, and physical labor means that women, in particular, may be seen as old in their 

forties or fifties.  

Unnoticed but not Unimportant  

Effective humanitarian assistance is based on assessment and surveillance data on the 

affected population and the vulnerable groups within it, and on meeting the needs of those most 

in need. Almost all guidance – whether targeting general audiences (such as the Sphere 

Handbook8) or sectorial- or agency-specific audiences (such as agency handbooks, sectorial 

standards or emergency-specific guidelines) – requires collection of sex- and age-disaggregated 

data (SADD).  In practice, however, most needs assessment and surveillance data combine data 

for all adults. This renders invisible the particular needs of older people.9 10 Yet health and 

nutrition needs of age groups differ, so it is crucial to disaggregate data to understand the profile 

and needs of people of various ages.  

Approaches to measuring disease burden and health impact can also be discriminatory.  

The disability-adjusted life year (DALY) method (which is endorsed by the World Health 

Organization and is in common usage) ascribes a value to each year of life according to age, with 

years lived as a young adult being valued more highly than years spent as a young child or older 



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adult.  Claiming that life years given to older people are objectively less valuable reflects a 

concern with receiving a return on investment rather than responding impartially and equitably 

to needs.11  Such age weighting and discounting undermines the principles of humanitarianism. 

Funding  

Institutional donors do not regard humanitarian assistance for older people as a priority.  

Two studies by HelpAge International analyzed the amount of humanitarian funding targeted at 

older people through the UN Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) and Flash Appeals in the past 

five years.12 13  They found that just 0.3% of projects funded included any activity that specifically 

targeted the needs of older people, who constitute 12.5% of the world’s population.  In 21 

countries, there had been no projects at all in the previous two years with activities tailored for 

older people. (Those countries included Chad, Central African Republic, South Sudan, Yemen, 

Zimbabwe, and 16 countries making up West Africa.) 

Increasing Population Numbers  

Demographics suggest that populations facing disasters will include an increasing 

proportion of older people. About 12.5% of the world’s population is aged 60 or over; 17% are 55 

or older; more than 22% are 50 or older.14  Moreover, with demographic change (declining fertility 

rates combined with increasing life expectancy), elderly populations in developing countries are 

growing faster than in developed countries.15  By 2050, the number of people over 60 is projected 

to almost triple, from 865 million in 2010 to 2.4 billion, to constitute 21% of the world’s 

population.  By then, more than 80% of older people will live in developing countries – where 

disasters are more likely to occur and their effects to be greater – compared with 60% today.16   

Where a generation is missing because of high HIV prevalence, conflict or economic 

migration, communities have higher proportions of older people. This is particularly common in 

remote rural areas.17    

Older people often make up a high proportion of people who choose not to flee in times 

of conflict.18 Hardship associated with a long trip and problems that get worse with age such as 

poor eyesight and limited mobility make it less likely that the elderly will get out of danger and 

seek help.  Moreover, their reluctance to leave homes, land, livestock or orphaned children under 

their care makes them less likely to receive any assistance.19  

A Commitment to Non-Discrimination?  

Old age today is grounds for exclusion from humanitarian assistance.  This was indeed 

the case in the Somali capital city in 2011.  During the height of the nutritional crisis, nearly all of 

the screening and therapeutic programmes were directed towards children and their mothers.  I 

observed that a large number of malnourished older people were living in makeshift tents all 

across the city, yet almost all the people being assessed for malnutrition were children.  Far too 

often, older people, invisible to aid providers, are too frail or self-abnegating to seek assistance 

even when it is being provided a few meters away.  This is unacceptable. 



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Among the 100,000 people displaced from Sudan’s Blue Nile state in July 2012, an MSF 

team found that the 50-and-above group, constituting 10.5% of the population, were dying at 

over five times the rate of those aged 5 to 49 years (3.45 vs. 0.61 per 10,000 per day, respectively) 

and at over twice the rate of those under the age of 5 (1.26 per 10,000 children per day).20   We 

now know that three out of four killed by the 2005 Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana, were over the 

age of 60 even though they constituted only 11% of the population.21 22  Similarly, one of three 

casualties in the 2011 Tohuku earthquake and Tsunami were over the age of 60 despite 

comprising just one fourth of the population.23  Those above age 60, constituting 9% of the 

Nepalese population, are considered to be among the most vulnerable victims of the 2015 Nepal 

Earthquake.24  Even allowing for the obvious fact that people naturally die at higher rates when 

they get older, these are unacceptably high figures and should not be ignored.  

Why are older people invisible to humanitarian agencies?  Hutton suggests that, “We do 

not assess older people’s needs, nor do we address their needs through our assistance.”25  Maybe 

we see more inherent value in the life of a child than that of an older person; perhaps utilitarian 

considerations of the longer-term future of a society come into play; or maybe we simply go with 

the flow of current aid practice without questioning it. For whatever reason, humanitarian actors 

do not consider older people a priority, even though they are generally recognized to be a 

vulnerable group.  

Age and Vulnerability  

Health Needs  

Age has an important impact on health.  Older people have limited regenerative abilities 

and have health risks and needs that differ from younger people’s. The prevalence of chronic and 

non-communicable diseases increases significantly in old age; global aging is recognized as a 

major driver of non-communicable disease predominance in developing countries.26    

Older people in low- and middle-income countries are at especially high risk of 

cardiovascular disease, strokes, diabetes and dementia.  They may require palliative care and 

end-of-life pain management.  Evidence from conflicts and natural disasters shows that much 

excess morbidity and mortality results from the exacerbation of existing non-infectious diseases 

such as hypertension, diabetes and cancer.27    

This was exemplified in a recent survey of some of the estimated 10 million Syrians who 

have been displaced from home since the start of the civil war in March 2011 (7.8 million 

internally displaced and 2.8 million in neighboring countries such as Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, 

and Iraq).28 The survey conducted by HelpAge International and Handicap International in 

Lebanon and Jordan showed that 54% of older Syrian refugees have a chronic ailment while 65% 

present signs of psychological distress.29  

Yet the management of non-communicable chronic disease is a rarity humanitarian 

responses, and there are virtually no guidelines for management of chronic medical conditions 

after disasters.30  The latest revision of the Sphere Handbook, however, does recognize the 

increasing evidence of acute complications from chronic diseases in disasters and supports and 

encourages their treatment.31  



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Older people may also be at increased risk from communicable diseases.  Infectious 

diseases have a specific presentation in older people.  This is most obvious with respect to HIV 

and TB, but it also applies to infections such as diarrhea, pneumonia, and neglected tropical 

diseases.33 There are also reports of higher parasite loads, and in cases of malaria, a higher 

proportion of severe forms and an increase in fatal disease amongst older people.  

Preliminary results from a study of data from MSF cholera treatment centers in Haiti 

indicate that people over 60 years old are more likely to present with severe dehydration as 

opposed to mild dehydration when compared with younger adults. In addition, after controlling 

for other factors, people aged 80 years or older have 11 times the mortality of younger adults in 

cholera treatment centers.34 Preliminary analyses of age-disaggregated fatality rates of the recent 

outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in West Africa also suggest poor survival rates among 

older people when compared with young adults.35  Yet older people are rarely if ever identified as 

an at-risk group for communicable diseases, and infection control programs do not usually 

consider approaches geared specifically to the elderly population. 

There is evidence even from settings such as the UK’s National Health Service that an 

inverse care law operates: older people generally have higher healthcare needs than other 

demographic groups, and yet they have a lower provision of and access to medical care.36 

Nutrition Needs  

Few nutrition surveys are carried out among people aged 60 years and above, and, as we 

have seen, survey data collected in humanitarian crises are rarely disaggregated to show the 

situation of older age groups.  It is generally accepted that measuring the malnutrition of children 

under five years provides an indicator of whether a nutrition intervention is needed in the 

general population, but this does not provide humanitarian agencies with enough information on 

other age groups to inform targeted interventions.  

In October 2011, HelpAge conducted a nutrition survey of older people in the refugee 

camps of Dadaab, Kenya.37 It showed that older people were also vulnerable to malnutrition, 

although they were not recognized as such in the other surveys that had been done, and they 

were not included in supplementary and therapeutic nutrition programs.  HelpAge International 

recommends the use of MUAC (mid-upper arm circumference) for assessing the nutritional 

status of older people and recommends that older people be systematically screened and 

included in nutrition surveys.38 

Food rations also need to be adapted for older age groups. Although total recommended 

energy intake declines with age, requirements for many nutrients increase in order to maintain 

organ systems with declining functionality. Inadequacies of micronutrients – such as vitamins B6, 

B12, C and E, folate and calcium – are common amongst older people and are linked to the risk of 

chronic disease. Adequate protein is also critical for maintaining functional status with age. At 

the same time, older people may require smaller amounts of iron and vitamin A, nutrients 

emphasized for maternal and child nutrition.39 As is often the case with older people, however, 

research on their nutritional requirements is inconclusive.  

Access and Capacity  

Many older people are not able to travel to health and registration facilities, stand in 

queues for food distributions, carry heavy packages of food or containers of water, or compete 

with younger people for relief supplies.  In Lebanon, one out of every four older refugee was not 



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registered, compared to one out of eight children.   Strength, mobility, eyesight, and hearing 

decline with age, all of which affect people’s ability to access humanitarian assistance.  As a 

result, older people often depend on support from their families and communities to access care 

and assistance.  

 

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE? 

There is a need for academic, research, and practice communities to work towards 

ensuring that vulnerable groups are not excluded and their needs are met by humanitarian 

aid. I outline a set of priority areas for humanitarian response, to be incorporated into 

practice, research, and policy: 

PRACTICE 

Collect age-disaggregated data on who is accessing humanitarian assistance to 

ensure that older people are not being excluded. 

Ensure that all surveillance, needs, and vulnerability assessment data are 

disaggregated for older age groups. 

Systematically screen older people in nutrition surveys using MUAC. 

Provide adequate care in emergencies for chronic diseases and conditions, 

including palliative care and pain relief. 

Ensure that infection-control programs take into account the differing 

presentation and needs of older people. 

RESEARCH 

Research the optimum nutritional support for older people in emergency settings. 

Conduct operational research into the best way to ensure that older people’s health 

needs are comprehensively met in humanitarian programs. 

Conduct operational research to determine how best to improve older people’s access to 

humanitarian assistance both in open settings and in camps. 

POLICY 

Ensure that institutional funding bodies include the needs of older people in project 

proposals where appropriate, and fund them adequately. 



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There is a widespread assumption amongst aid agencies that older people are always 

cared for within their families.  However, in many situations, particularly in crises and disasters, 

this is a myth.  For example, following the 2010 floods in Pakistan, the Ministry for Social Welfare 

estimated the number of older people living without family support at 10% of the older 

population.   Similarly, 9% of older people in the Occupied Palestinian Territories live alone.   In 

camps for internally displaced people (IDPs) in Darfur, half of all the older people live alone.   

Special attention needs to be given by humanitarian agencies to facilitate older people’s access to 

care and assistance and ensure that they are not excluded.  

Conclusion 

As the numbers of older people affected by humanitarian crises and disasters increase, 

policy and practice must be adapted to ensure that older people's needs are consistently 

considered. Being old should no longer mean being ignored. 

AAGE President Iveris Martinez (FIU) and Dr. Unni Karunakara at the Association for Anthropology 

and Gerontology Conference on “Health Disparities in Aging,” held February 5-7, 2015. (Photo courtesy 

of Iveris Martinez) 



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NOTES 

1. An earlier version of this paper titled “Humanitarian assistance for older people: does it matter?” (June 

2012) was presented to Doctors Without Borders for discussion, and later published in PLoS Medicine 

(December 2012; 9(12):e1001357) as “Ending Neglect of Older People in the Response to 

Humanitarian Emergencies.” 

2. HelpAge International. Making a Living Last Longer: Insights into older people’s livelihood strategies. 

2011. 

3  Samuels F, Wells J. The loss of the middle ground: the impact of crises and HIV and AIDS on ‘skipped-

generation’ households. Project Briefing, ODI; November 2009.  

4.  Sear R, Mace R, McGregor IA. Maternal grandmothers improve nutritional status and survival of 

children in rural Gambia, Proc R Soc. August 2000; B267; 1453:1641-7.
 

 5. Gibson MA, Mace R. Helpful grandmothers in rural Ethiopia: A study of the effect of kin on child 

survival and growth. Evolution & Human Behavior. November 2005; 2 (6):469-82.  

6.  WHO. Definition of an older or elderly person. Available at: 

http://www.who.int/healthinfo/survey/ageingdefnolder/en/index.html 

7. Sanderson W, Scherbov S. Remeasuring Aging, Science. 2010; 329:1287-8.
 

8. The Sphere Project. Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Response. Belmont 

Press; 2011. 

9.  Mazurana D, Benelli P, Gupta H, Walker P. Sex and Age Matter: Improving Humanitarian Response in 

Emergencies. Feinstein International Center, Tufts University; August 2011.
 

10.  du Cros P, Venis S, Karunakara U. Should mortality data for the elderly be collected routinely in 

emergencies? The practical challenges of age-disaggregated surveillance systems.  Trans R Soc Trop 

Med Hyg 2013; 107:669-671. 

11. Death at a young age is counted as a greater loss than death of someone older, so the value of a life 

is discounted by a certain percentage for each year a person ages – 3% seems to be the usual 

discount in DALY calculations. 

12. HelpAge International. A Study of Humanitarian Financing for Older People and People with 

Disabilities. 2012.  

13. HelpAge International. A Study of Humanitarian Financing for Older People. 2010.
 

14. Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat. 

2010. World Population Prospects: the 2010 Revision. Available at: http://esa.un.org/unpp.
 

15. Shrestha LB. Population Aging in Developing Countries. Health Affairs. 2000; 19; 3:204-212. 

16.  Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations 

Secretariat. Op. cit. 

17.  Samuels F, Wells J. Op. cit. 

18. Karunakara UK. The demography of forced migration: displacement and fertility in the West Nile 

region of northern Uganda and southern Sudan. Johns Hopkins University. DrPH. 2004.
 

http://www.who.int/healthinfo/survey/ageingdefnolder/en/index.html
http://esa.un.org/unpp


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19. Harrell-Bond BE. Imposing Aid: Emergency Assistance to Refugees. Oxford: Oxford University
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to stop being crude? Elderly mortality rates in a refugee camp Maban County, South Sudan. MSF 

Scientific Day. 10 May 2013.  http://www.msf.org. uk/sites/uk/files/10._du_cros_-

_older_mortality.pdf  

21.  http://new.dhh.louisiana.gov/assets/docs/katrina/deceasedreports/KatrinaDeaths_082008.pdf 

22.  http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/documents/ageing/IDDR2014/Pressrelease.pdf 

23.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Tōhoku_earthquake_and_tsunami 

24.  http://www.helpage.org/newsroom/nepal-earthquake-older-people-among-most-vulnerable/# 

25.  Hutton D. Older people in emergencies: considerations for action and policy development. WHO; 

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26. UN General Assembly 65th session. Note by the Secretary-General; 13 Sept 2010.
 

27.  Spiegel P, Checchi F, Colombo S, Paik E. Healthcare needs of people affected by conflict: future 

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28.  iDMC. http://www.internal-displacement.org/middle-east-and-north-africa/syria/ 

29.  HelpAge International and Handicap International.  Hidden victims of the Syrian Crisis: disabled, 

injured and older refugees.  2014. 

30 Chan EY, Sondorp E. Including chronic disease care in emergency responses. Humanitarian Exchange. 

ODI. 2008; 41. 

31  The Sphere Project. Op cit.
 

32  Gavazzi G, Herrmann F, Krause KH. Aging and infectious diseases in the developing world. Clinical 

Infectious Diseases. 2004; CID 39.
 

33  Chappuis F, Alirol E, Worku DT, Mueller Y (2011) High mortality among older patients treated with 

pentavalent antimonials for visceral leishmaniasis in East Africa and rationale for switch to liposomal 

amphotericin B. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 55: 455–456.  

34  Kwok J, Swarthout T, Fritsch P, Raza A, Newport M. Loving the Older People in times of Cholera: 

preliminary findings from a study to analyse care and outcomes for cholera patients treated by 

Médecins Sans Frontières Operational Centre Amsterdam in Haiti and Zimbabwe 2008-12. Pre-

publication. Available at: http://issuu.com/msfuk/docs/pdf/1
 

35. http://www.ebola-anthropology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Older-people-and-Ebola-Ebola-

Response-Anthropology-Platform.pdf 

36.  Hart JT, The Inverse Care Law. Lancet. 1971; i:405-12.
 

37.  Fritsch P, Myatt M. Nutrition and baseline survey of older people in three refugee camps in Dadaab. 

HelpAge International. October 2011.
 

38.  ibid. 

39.  Tucker KL, Buranapin S. Nutrition and aging in developing counties. Journal of Nutrition. September 

2001; 131:2417S-23S. 

http://new.dhh.louisiana.gov/assets/docs/katrina/deceasedreports/KatrinaDeaths_082008.pdf
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/documents/ageing/IDDR2014/Pressrelease.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Tōhoku_earthquake_and_tsunami
http://www.helpage.org/newsroom/nepal-earthquake-older-people-among-most-vulnerable/%23
http://www.internal-displacement.org/middle-east-and-north-africa/syria/
http://issuu.com/msfuk/docs/pdf/1
http://www.ebola-anthropology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Older-people-and-Ebola-Ebola-Response-Anthropology-Platform.pdf
http://www.ebola-anthropology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Older-people-and-Ebola-Ebola-Response-Anthropology-Platform.pdf


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40.  HelpAge International and Handicap International. Op cit. 

41.  HelpAge International. Analysis of Older People’s Ongoing Vulnerabilities in Sindh, Pakistan. 2011.
 

42.  Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. Elderly people in the Palestinian Territory: Facts and Figures. 

July 2005.  

43.  HelpAge International. Older people in Africa: a forgotten generation. 2008.  

44.  Karunakara U, Stevenson F. Ending Neglect of Older People in the Response to Humanitarian 

Emergencies. PLoS Med. 2012. 9(12): e1001357.