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Keep Doing What Matters for Healthy Ageing

Healthy Ageing Day

On 6 May, Australia marks the inaugural National Healthy Ageing Day, created and led by iLA to bring communities, organisations, and individuals together around a shared goal: supporting people to age well, not just age longer. National Healthy Ageing Day | 6 May 2026 | iLA

National Healthy Ageing Day aims to shift the conversation about ageing away from decline and dependency, and towards capability, connection, and everyday life. This year’s theme, Keep doing what matters, reflects a simple but powerful idea. Ageing well means having the confidence, support, and opportunity to continue doing the things that give life meaning.

As iLA highlights, Australia is ageing rapidly. More people are living longer, but many are also spending more years in poorer health, placing increasing pressure on families, communities, and care systems. Without a stronger focus on prevention and capability, we risk adding years without adding quality of life.

Healthy ageing is about more than staying busy

As life changes, many older Australians find that their social world quietly shrinks. Retirement, losing a partner, health changes, or no longer driving can reduce everyday contact with others.

This often shows up as:
  • Fewer reasons to leave the house
  • Days blending together
  • Seeing family less often
  • Relying on one or two people for all social contact

None of this means someone has failed at ageing well. It simply reflects changing circumstances.

National Healthy Ageing Day reinforces that wellbeing is not only about physical health. It’s also about staying engaged, connected, and involved in what matters to you. Meaningful social connection supports confidence, positive mental health, and long‑term independence.

"Keep doing what matters is the heart of healthy ageing. It is not about pushing limits or chasing perfection. It is about having the capability to live the life you value, and staying connected, active, and engaged in what gives your life meaning." Hilary O’Connell Principal Advisor – Healthy Ageing & Reablement, iLA

Healthy ageing looks different for everyone and doesn’t require constant activity or big life changes. It’s about supporting people to stay involved in ways that fit their life now. For many older Australians, it might look like:

  • Having something regular to look forward to
  • Spending time with familiar faces
  • Sharing interests rather than making small talk
  • Feeling welcome without pressure to perform

How Inclusee supports connection as part of healthy ageing

This is where Inclusee fits.

Inclusee’s Virtual Community Centre offers facilitated, interest‑based online social clubs for older Australians and carers, accessed easily from the comfort of home. Sessions run regularly and are designed to be welcoming for people who may feel hesitant about technology or group settings.

This model supports key healthy ageing principles identified by iLA by:

  • Supporting ongoing social connection
  • Building confidence and participation
  • Enabling people to keep doing what matters, even when circumstances change
  • Reducing barriers related to mobility, transport, or location

People are supported to stay engaged in a way that works for their life now.

A day to reflect, and a reason to act

National Healthy Ageing Day invites Australians to turn healthy ageing into everyday action. For individuals, that might mean exploring new ways to stay connected. For families, it may mean noticing when more support would help. For organisations, it’s an opportunity to strengthen practices that support connection, independence, and wellbeing. We are proud to be playing our part.

Connection Changes Everything

Inclusee Ltd, a not-for-profit charity, fosters connections among older Australians and Carers through digital programs, aiming to create a sustainable, educated, fun, and supportive online community.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF COUNTRY
At Inclusee Ltd, we honour and respect the Elders of the Turrbal people, past, present, and future, and recognise the many First Nations language groups as the traditional custodians of the lands where we work and connect.

Inclusee believes in respecting and cherishing all of Australia’s elder community. By valuing our First Nation’s rich stories, traditions, and deep knowledge of environmental stewardship, we commit to working alongside them to foster a connected, educated, and sustainable community.

We believe that by honouring First Nations people, we are not only preserving a vital cultural heritage but also embracing sustainable practices that ensure a healthier planet for future generations.
Inclusee Ltd, a not-for-profit charity, fosters connections among older Australians, First Nations people, and volunteers through digital programs, aiming to create a sustainable, educated, and supportive virtual community.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF COUNTRY
At Inclusee Ltd, we honour and respect the Elders of the Turrbal people, past, present, and future, and recognise the many First Nations language groups as the traditional custodians of the lands where we work and connect.

Inclusee believes in respecting and cherishing all of Australia’s elder community. By valuing our First Nation’s rich stories, traditions, and deep knowledge of environmental stewardship, we commit to working alongside them to foster a connected, educated, and sustainable community.

We believe that by honouring First Nations people, we are not only preserving a vital cultural heritage but also embracing sustainable practices that ensure a healthier planet for future generations.
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