Around 750,000 elderly people are being forced to choose
between feeding themselves and heating their homes, a charity has warned. New
figures reveal what older people must deal with due to the high cost of living,
as a third of pensioner households have less than £300 a week to live on.
A survey of 1,000 people aged 65 or over by the Independent
Age charity has revealed that 36 per cent said they do not heat their homes
adequately during the colder months because they fear they will not be able to
pay their fuel bills. A further 43 per cent have gone to bed early to stay warm
at least once, with an estimated 890,000 doing so often or every day. Fears
linked to the cost of heating also mean 6 per cent, or 637,000 people, do not
eat a hot meal every day in winter, while a further 6 per cent heat only one
room in their home. Others have opted to leave their home to stay warm and
avoid costs, with one in seven visiting the library, shopping centre or using
public transport.
Janet Morrison, chief executive of Independent Age said:
"It is saddening that so many pensioners are faced with the choice of
heating or eating during the coldest months of the year.”
Some 1.6million people live in poverty, according to the
charity, with 900,000 of those living in severe poverty. The study comes after
it was revealed that the 2.3million poorest and coldest households in England
are receiving improved insulation at a rate of 1 per cent a year – meaning they
won’t all be properly protected for almost a century.
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