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Shiho Fukada

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  • Men in Kamagasak, from clockwise right: Tamiichi Kuwata, 65, who depends on welfare, Syunsuke Fujii, 64, unemployed  construction worker, Satoshi Sato, 64.
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  • LEFT: Doors of a cheap motel where many day labors and welfare recipients live are seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.<br />
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RIGHT: Keys of cheap motel where many day labors and welfare recipients stay are seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.
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  • LEFT: Kazuki, 65, stands in front of his shack  built in a park in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: A trash can is seen at a laundry mat in Kamagasaki, Japan.
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  • America is on the threshold of becoming the first ever mass geriatric society, with tens of millions of people living into their 80s, 90s. and beyond. Yet just as the need for caregivers is rising, the number of them is dwindling. 60% of those over 85 live in nursing home and it costs more money to be admitted in a nursing home that provides quality care. In addition, for millions of Americans, living longer means coping with loneliness, multiple chronic illnesses, increasing frailty and prolonged periods of dementia, which may last for years and sometimes even decades.
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  • LEFT: Hiromi Minakami, 70, lives in a tiny room paid by welfare in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: A pillow of Hiromi Minakami, 70, who lives in a tiny room paid by welfare, is seen in Kamagasaki, Japan.
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  • LEFT:  A pair of slippers are seen at a cheap motel where many day labors live in Kamagasaki, Japan. <br />
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RIGHT: Hiromi Okamoto, 74, lives in a tiny room paid by welfare in Kamagasaki, Japan.
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  • America is on the threshold of becoming the first ever mass geriatric society, with tens of millions of people living into their 80s, 90s. and beyond. Yet just as the need for caregivers is rising, the number of them is dwindling. 60% of those over 85 live in nursing home and it costs more money to be admitted in a nursing home that provides quality care. In addition, for millions of Americans, living longer means coping with loneliness, multiple chronic illnesses, increasing frailty and prolonged periods of dementia, which may last for years and sometimes even decades.
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