Members of the Certified Senior Guidance Association
are professionals who work more diligently on behalf of their senior clients.
Members have the professional designation of "Certified
Senior Counselor".
The following principles are paramount to our Members
approach to working with Senior Citizens.
Independence
1. Older persons should have access to adequate food,
water, shelter, clothing and health care through the provision of income,
family and community support and self-help.
2. Older persons should have the opportunity to work
or to have access to other income-generating opportunities.
3. Older persons should be able to participate in
determining when and at what pace withdrawal from the labor force takes place.
4. Older persons should have access to appropriate
educational and training programs.
5. Older persons should be able to live in environments
that are safe and adaptable to personal preferences and changing capacities.
6. Older persons should be able to reside at home
for as long as possible.
Participation
7. Older persons should remain integrated in society,
participate actively in the formulation and implementation of policies that
directly affect their well-being and share their knowledge and skills with
younger generations.
8. Older persons should be able to seek and develop
opportunities for service to the community and to serve as volunteers in
positions appropriate to their interests and capabilities.
9. Older persons should be able to form movements
or associations of older persons.
Care
10. Older persons should benefit from family and community
care and protection in accordance with each society's system of cultural
values.
11. Older persons should have access to health care
to help them to maintain or regain the optimum level of physical, mental
and emotional well- being and to prevent or delay the onset of illness.
12. Older persons should have access to social and
legal services to enhance their autonomy, protection and care.
13. Older persons should be able to utilize appropriate
levels of institutional care providing protection, rehabilitation and social
and mental stimulation in a humane and secure environment.
14. Older persons should be able to enjoy human rights
and fundamental freedoms when residing in any shelter, care or treatment
facility, including full respect for their dignity, beliefs, needs and privacy
and for the right to make decisions about their care and the quality of their
lives.
Self-fulfillment
15. Older persons should be able to pursue opportunities
for the full development of their potential.
16. Older persons should have access to the educational,
cultural, spiritual and recreational resources of society.
Dignity
17. Older persons should be able to live in dignity
and security and be free of exploitation and physical or mental abuse.
18. Older persons should be treated fairly regardless
of age, gender, racial or ethnic background, disability or other status,
and be valued independently of their economic contribution.