Trends and developments in home care services: an international perspective
Article Abstract:
The growth of community and home care services in most developed countries can be attributed to cost and quality of life considerations. However, only a few needy elderly people in Europe have benefited from the delivery of home care services. Some of these delivery methods are of the case management or case mediator variety while others try to minimize the disparity between institutional and community-based services. So far, only Denmark has anticipated the importance of home care given the country's demographic and social realities.
Publication Name: Journal of Gerontological Social Work
Subject: Sociology and social work
ISSN: 0163-4372
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Evaluation and quality assurance for in-home services
Article Abstract:
Home care programs can greatly benefit from internal evaluations. The three main classes of evaluations are formative evaluations, process or program evaluations and summative or outcome evaluations. A home care agency can also use these evaluation tools in the implementation of quality assurance methods such as Continuous Quality Improvement and Total Quality Management. Formative and process evaluations are easy to incorporate into current agency operations while outcome evaluations usually necessitate the assistance of academics.
Publication Name: Journal of Gerontological Social Work
Subject: Sociology and social work
ISSN: 0163-4372
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Clinical assessment in home care
Article Abstract:
The demand for home health care services is expected to grow substantially due to the increase in population of the elderly. There are indications that managed home care services will be implemented due to difficulties associated with entitlements and other cost-containment efforts. Qualitative and quantitative impact of home care must be considered with regards to the type of service, intensity, duration and costs. These studies will be based on systematic and comprehensive assessment conducted by trained assessors.
Publication Name: Journal of Gerontological Social Work
Subject: Sociology and social work
ISSN: 0163-4372
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Churches and social development: A South African perspective. The psychosocial needs of adolescents affected by HIV/AIDS: A South African study
- Abstracts: Social work development in Kazakhstan: A ladder to a healthier nation
- Abstracts: Transactions in symbolic resources: a resource dependence model of congressional deliberation. Presenting the self, the social body and the olfactory: Managing smells in everyday life experiences
- Abstracts: Covariates of infant mortality in China: an exploratory approach. Birthweight-specific infant mortality risks for Native Americans and Whites, United States, 1960 and 1984
- Abstracts: Vietnam: folly, quagmire or inevitability? Examining the 'authoritarian advantage' in Southeast Asian development in the wake of Asian economic failures