19 April 2024
The dining room of the 124-year-old Kowloon Bowling Green Club was empty and silent as LIFE+ sat down recently to chat with Dr Edward Leung. Picture perfect Gunners, ordered by the doctor, sparkled in their tankards atop the white linen tablecloth, as business cards were exchanged.
Dr Leung introduced himself as the President of Hong Kong Association of Gerontology, a body established almost 40 years ago, at a time when the young doctor was embarking on his professional journey into geriatric medicine. But Dr Leung is a man of several business cards, and many titles. Read one of the various biographies prefacing his frequent domestic and international speaking engagements, and you start to get a sense of a long career dedicated to his fascination for improving the latter stages of life.
Therefore, the Association of Gerontology has begun providing training programmes for property management personnel and is working with Chinachem Group and other developers to enhance the service offered to elderly residents in regular apartment buildings.
Like the residential care home accreditation they pioneered, the Association of Gerontology, led by the irrepressible Edward Leung, is again laying the groundwork for a city population going through a significant societal change.
Back in the dining room, the Gunners are drained, and the silence has been replaced by the buzz of activity. Groups of elderly men at tables chatting excitedly, women ‘of a certain age’ having lunch to discuss the week, and couples quietly reading the newspapers together. This vignette perfectly mirrored Dr Leung’s desired future. And with some help from the private sector and Government, he will no doubt continue to postpone his retirement to achieve it.
Like the residential care home accreditation they pioneered, the Association of Gerontology, led by the irrepressible Edward Leung, is again laying the groundwork for a city population going through a significant societal change.
Back in the dining room, the Gunners are drained, and the silence has been replaced by the buzz of activity. Groups of elderly men at tables chatting excitedly, women ‘of a certain age’ having lunch to discuss the week, and couples quietly reading the newspapers together. This vignette perfectly mirrored Dr Leung’s desired future. And with some help from the private sector and Government, he will no doubt continue to postpone his retirement to achieve it.