30 research outputs found

    Understanding the Health and Social Service Needs of People Over Age 65

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    The complexity of the issues involved with providing appropriate health care and social services from the appropriate setting to people over age 65 can hardly be overstated. One of the present debates in the field focuses on the value of institutions as the customary setting for providing health care; the arguments are based on considerations of economic efficiency and the recipient\u27s quality of life. Some of the debators suggest deinstitutionalizing as many of the health care recipients as possible, while simultaneously upgrading the quality and quantity of home based support services. The logic of deinstitutionalization is often buttressed by claims that either a greater level of services can be provided for the same dollar amount or the same level of services can be provided while permitting the expansion of services in other areas. Advocates of deinstitutionalization suggest that the quality of life can be increased for those people who can retain a greater independence over their lives by taking advantage of home based support services, rather than being more dependent in an institution. They suggest that all too often an older person is subjected to greater dependence in many areas solely because the person needs assistance in some specific areas

    A Method of Analysis and Triadic Performance on a Complementary Task

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    Dental care use by U.S. veterans eligible for VA care

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    Military veterans eligible for dental care in U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities cooperated for a mailed survey about their dental care utilization. Subjects were selected because of their eligibility for continuing dental care in VA facilities at no monetary cost. However, only 48% reported the VA as their only or primary source of dental care; this allowed us the oppurtunity to compare dental care frequency by those who received dental care at no monetary cost with those who did not, as well as measure delivery system effects on dental care use. Consequently, we tested respondent-level and delivery system-level hypotheses regarding determinants of veterans' dental care use. Predisposing characteristics (dentate status, usual reason for dental visits, and the importance placed on dental care and oral health) were the strongest determinants of interval since last dental visit. Enabling determinants (current source of dental care, and having a regular source of care) were also significant, but measures of need for dental care (perceived oral health and perceived need for treatment) were not. More recent dental care use by veterans who used the VA delivery system as their source of dental care, even with dental care payment source and other determinants accounted for, suggests that the VA delivery system may have promoted more regular use compared to other systems.dental care utilization delivery systems attitudes dental insurance
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