In response to the World Health Organization (WHO) and to promote the arrival of the age-friendly urban policy and aging era, Taipei and the world's advanced countries are implementing this meaningful project. On November 16, 2011, the mayor of Taipei signed the "Dublin Declaration" commitment, the first international conference on age-friendly cities by the WHO, to participate in the world network of age-friendly cities.
From 2011 to 2015 Taipei submitted an application to the Department of Health and the National Health Department to handle "age-friendly cities promotion plan. "In 2011, Taipei's Wanhua District first joined the ranks to promote age-friendly city. In 2012, this expanded to the 12 districts.
From 2013 onwards professional bodies were commissioned to handle age-friendly cities to promotional mentoring program, established in Taipei to promote age-friendly city group. Taipei also applied to join the World Health Organization (WHO) age-friendly cities network. In 2015, Conformity 19 Departments established promotional groups, inter-bureau consensus, and meeting and group counseling sessions to promote the 51 indicators and 27 action plans, the establishment of inter-office communication platform to facilitate lateral cooperation, push to strengthen elderly Objective-friendly city, and construction of "happiness Taipei, age-friendly" silver-haired park. Starting in 2016, "Age-friendly city" incorporated cities to jointly promote health and to take care of the silver-haired.
The mayor signed the Dublin Declaration