
18th November 2025
The 19th Public Health and Occupational Medicine (PHOM) Conference was held on 23-24 October 2025 in Singapore, attended by Ms Susana Concordo Harding, Senior Director of the International Longevity Centre Singapore (ILC-S), Tsao Foundation.
At the conference, Ms Susana Concordo Harding offered keynote insights and panel reflections that underscored a central theme: Singapore’s ageing future will be shaped not only by healthcare advancements, but by community strength, individual capability and supportive care systems.
Her contributions closely aligned with the International Longevity Centre Global Alliance (ILC-GA)’s global vision of promoting healthy, empowered and purposeful longevity for all spotlighting ageing as a social asset that, when nurtured, strengthens society.
In Plenary 1, Ms Harding highlighted the Community for Successful Ageing (ComSA) model as a decade-long demonstration of ageing as a community achievement. She described how health coaching, peer leadership, lifelong learning and intergenerational engagement have transformed Whampoa into a “living laboratory” where older adults are recognised as contributors with agency and purpose. This community-rooted approach reflects ILC-GA’s belief that longevity flourishes when systems, families, institutions and neighbourhoods work together and when older adults are viewed not as dependents, but as partners in building vibrant, age-inclusive communities.
In the WELL Continuum panel, Ms Harding emphasised that wellness in later life is shaped across the entire life course. Social ties, emotional resilience, financial security and supportive environments accumulate over decades to influence population health outcomes. She highlighted person-led, relationship-centred and place-based approaches that strengthen neighbourhood cohesion long before older age. This life-course framing echoes ILC-GA’s call for nations to design policies that support resilience, contribution and well-being from adulthood through later life.
During Plenary 4, Ms Harding addressed the urgent need for integrative population health systems that respond to both medical and social determinants. She underscored three priorities: integrating preventive care with the Bio-Psycho-Social (BPS) approach; recognising communities as essential health assets; and treating caregiving both paid and unpaid as critical social infrastructure. These themes reflect ILC-GA’s advocacy for building age-inclusive, community-anchored health systems that uphold prevention, social networks and strong caregiver protections.
Across all sessions, Ms Harding’s reflections aligned with vision of “Living Well Together in an Ageing Singapore”, inspired by the African humanist principle Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (“I am because we are”). This vision positions ageing as a collective journey grounded in interdependence, mutual responsibility and stronger social bonds across generations. As Singapore digitalises, society must remain globally connected yet locally rooted ensuring older adults have access to technology, digital literacy and opportunities to participate meaningfully in a connected world, so longevity does not lead to digital exclusion. At the same time, Singapore must grow stronger and more adaptive, building resilience, inclusive policies and robust community networks in line with ILC-GA’s belief that ageing societies can become more cohesive, innovative and future-ready.
Ms Harding’s contributions reaffirmed that ageing is not a challenge to be managed but a shared opportunity to build a society where people of all ages can thrive, connect and contribute.
An Erasmus+ project led by Elpida, Fundacja Różne Wątki and Leyden Academy on Vitality & Ageing explores gender differences in adult education participation among people aged 60 and older in the Czech Republic, Poland and the Netherlands.
9th June 2026
A Casebook of Clinical Dilemmas from Around the World – A Graphic novel on medical ethics
Graphic Medical Ethics: A Casebook of Clinical Dilemmas from Around the World presents real-life medical ethics cases from eight countries in graphic (comic) form, offering accessible, multicultural perspectives on complex healthcare dilemmas for both professionals and general readers.
18th May 2026
Getting Older Adults Moving at the Right Time
Research by Gali Albalak explored how the timing of physical activity affects sleep, mood and health in adults aged 60 to 80 years with sleep difficulties. The study found that morning exercise was associated with earlier bedtimes, improved mood and higher energy levels.
6th May 2026

