14,853 research outputs found
The System of Long-Term Care in Poland
In the field of social protection, Poland belongs to the EU group of countries with the family-based welfare model, what is extremely visible for the long-term care where family is the main care provider for elderly individuals with limitations in activities of daily living. At the same time the proportion of elderly in the coming decades is projected to be among the highest in the European Union, what raises questions on the design of the long-term care.
For the moment the system is highly unregulated and disintegrated between social assistance and health care services. But it is the health sector that concentrates policy debate with a proposal of an introduction of nursing insurance. In the social sector, the significant changes that were favorable to LTC services development were introduced by the law on the social assistance (2004) and family benefits (2003) widening the scope of care available at home and in adult day care centers. But still provision of services is insufficient and a market of private services, paid out-of-pocket rapidly develops. It seems that main problems of the long-term care development in the future will be raising demand against insufficient resources and diversified priorities of the health care system
International Profiles of Health Care Systems, 2011
This publication presents overviews of the health care systems of Australia, Canada, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States. Each overview covers health insurance, public and private financing, health system organization, quality of care, health disparities, efficiency and integration, use of health information technology, use of evidence-based practice, cost containment, and recent reforms and innovations. In addition, summary tables provide data on a number of key health system characteristics and performance indicators, including overall health care spending, hospital spending and utilization, health care access, patient safety, care coordination, chronic care management, disease prevention, capacity for quality improvement, and public views
The Development of Long-Term Care in Post-Socialist Member States of the EU
Long-term care (LTC) in the new EU member states, which used to belong to the former socialist countries, is not yet a legally separated sector of social security. However, the ageing dynamics are more intensive in these states than in the old EU member states. This paper analyses the process of creating an LTC sector in the context of institutional reforms of social protection systems during the transition period. The authors explain LTC’s position straddling the health and social sectors, the underdevelopment of formal LTC, and the current policies regarding the risk of LTC dependency. The paper is based mainly on the analysis of information provided by country experts in the ANCIEN project
Models for providing improved care in residential care homes: a thematic literature review
This Annotated Bibliography is one output from a review of the available research evidence to support improved care in residential care homes as the needs of older people intensify.
Key findings
The review identified extremely little published evidence on residential care homes; the research base is almost exclusively related to provision of care in nursing homes. Much of this research is from the US or other non-UK sources. Although it could be argued that some findings are generalisable to the UK residential care context, a systematic process is required
to identify which. The literature often makes no distinction between nursing and residential homes; use of generic terms such as ‘care home’ should be avoided.
There is considerable international debate in the quality improvement literature about the relationship between quality of care and quality of life in nursing and residential homes.
Measures of social care, as well as clinical care, are needed. The centrality of the resident’s voice in measuring quality of life must be recognised. Ethnic minority residents are almost entirely absent from the quality improvement literature.
Some clinical areas, internationally identified as key in terms of quality e.g. palliative care, are absent in the general nursing and residential home quality improvement literature. Others such as mental health (dementia and depression), diabetes, and nutrition are present but not fully integrated.
Considerable evidence points to a need for better management of medication in nursing homes. Pharmacist medication reviews have shown a positive effect in nursing homes. It is unclear how this evidence might relate to residential care.
There is evidence that medical cover for nursing and residential care home residents is suboptimal.
Care could be restructured to give a greater scope for proactive and preventive interventions. General practitioners' workload in care homes may be considered against quality-of-care measures.
There is US literature on the relationship between nurse staffing and nursing care home quality, with quality measured through clinical-based outcomes for residents and organisational outcomes. Conclusions are difficult to draw however due to inconsistencies in the evidencebase.
Hospital admission and early discharge to nursing homes research may not be generalisable to residential care. The quality of inter-institutional transfers and ensuring patient safety across settings is important. To date research has not considered transfer from residential to nursing home care.
The literature on district nurse and therapist roles in care homes includes very little research on residential care. Partnership working between district nurses and care home staff appears largely to occur by default at present. There is even less research evidence on therapist input
to care homes.
Set against the context outlined above, the international literature provides evidence of a number of approaches to care improvement, primarily in nursing homes. These include little discussion of cost-effectiveness other than in telecare. Research is needed in the UK on care
improvement in residential homes
Quality Assurance Indicators of Long-Term Care in European Countries
This study reports on the quality indicators that were collected by the ANCIEN project partners in each country
considered in Work Package 5 (Quality in Long-Term Care). The main contribution of this report is a classification of
the quality assurance indicators in different European countries according to three dimensions: organisation type
(indicators applied to formal institutional care \u2013 FIC, formal home-based care \u2013 FHBC, formal home nursing care -
FHNC, and informal home care - IHC); quality dimensions (indicators about effectiveness, safety, patient value
responsiveness, or coordination) and system dimensions (input, process, or outcome indicators). The countries that
provided quality indicators, which are used at a national level or are recommended to be used at a local level by a
national authority, are: Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and
the United Kingdom. In total, we collected 390 quality indicators. Each quality indicator has been assigned to one or
more options in each dimension
Supporting safe medicines transition for residents entering care homes
Postponed access: the file will be accessible after 2022-05-19Master´s Thesis in PharmacyFARM399/05HMATF-FAR
Nursing homes; Consulting services practice aid, 94-2
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_assoc/1052/thumbnail.jp
Maine Mental Health Annual Review and Progress Report 1977
Maine Mental Health Annual Review and Progress Report 1977
State of Maine., Department of Mental Health and Corrections, Augusta, Maine, 1977.
George A. Zitnay, Commissioner
Contents: Preface / Administrative Part / Services and Facilities Parthttps://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/me_collection/1136/thumbnail.jp
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