17,000 elderly living alone in Japan die at home in January-March: police survey-Xinhua

17,000 elderly living alone in Japan die at home in January-March: police survey

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2024-05-20 09:08:15

An elderly person walks on a business street in Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 18, 2023. (Xinhua/Zhang Xiaoyu)

More than 17,000 elderly individuals living alone passed away at home between January and March in Japan, highlighting the concerning trend of "lonely deaths" in the country. 

TOKYO, May 20 (Xinhua) -- A recent survey by Japan's National Police Agency (NPA) showed that 17,034 elderly people living alone died at home across the country from January to March.

The survey covered 60,466 dead bodies handled by Japanese police during the first three months of 2024. Of them, 21,716 were of people who lived by themselves, including cases of suicide.

Nearly 80 percent of the "lonely deaths," or 17,034 people, were aged 65 and over, including 2,080 people aged between 65 and 69, 3,204 between 70 and 74, 3,480 between 75 and 79, 3,348 between 80 and 84, and 4,922 aged 85 and over.

An elderly woman sits at her fruit shop in Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 18, 2023. (Xinhua/Zhang Xiaoyu)

A lonely death is defined as one in which a person dies without anyone else witnessing it, with a certain period passing before the body is found, according to an interim discussion in 2023 by a Cabinet Office working group tasked with looking into the issue.

The NPA is expected to continue collecting the data as part of government efforts to tackle the issue of a rapidly greying society.

The total number of deaths at home among elderly people living alone in 2024 is estimated to reach about 68,000, according to the survey.

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