3 research outputs found

    Publicly funded home care for older people in Ireland: Determinants of utilisation and policy implications

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    Background: The majority of older people are independent and self caring. When long-term care is required this is provided across a range of community and residential settings including the older person’s own home. Policy direction and the preference of older people are directed towards supporting older people to remain living in their homes for as long as possible. The majority of home care is provided informally by unpaid carers with a smaller proportion provided formally by paid carers. Formal care is predominantly publicly financed but may be delivered by public, private and not-for-profit organizations. The aim of this study was to identify the determinants of formal home care utilisation amongst community living older people in Ireland. Methodology: The study was cross-sectional in design using data from The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA). Respondents were interviewed between 2009 and 2011; the response rate was 62%. The behavioural model of health service utilisation provided a framework for the analysis (Aday and Andersen, 1974). Results: Multivariable logistic regression revealed a wide range of factors which predict service utilisation. The strongest determinant of formal home care utilisation was self-reported difficulty with instrumental activities of daily living, followed by older age and living alone. Conclusions: The research provides a population based profile of the characteristics of older adults utilising formal home care services provided by the State. Policy implications include the need for a whole system perspective including standardized access and assessment procedures across the system and a shift in orientation away from domestic care towards greater provision of personal care at home. This study identifies a need to consider home care utilisation in older adults who self-report no limitations in either activities of daily living (ADL) or instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) when modeling the demand for home care in the future

    Healthcare Recommendations from the Personalised ICT Supported Service for Independent Living and Active Ageing (PERSSILAA) Study

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    In the face of demographic ageing European healthcare providers and policy makers are recognising an increasing prevalence of frail, community-dwelling older adults, prone to adverse healthcare outcomes. Prefrailty, before onset of functional decline, is suggested to be reversible but interventions targeting this risk syndrome are limited. No consensus on the definition, diagnosis or management of pre-frailty exists. The PERsonalised ICT Supported Service for Independent Living and Active Ageing (PERSSILAA) project (2013-2016 under Framework Programme 7, grant #610359) developed a comprehensive Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) supported platform to screen, assess, manage and monitor pre-frail community-dwelling older adults in order to address pre-frailty and promote active and healthy ageing. PERSSILAA, a multi-domain ICT service, targets three pre-frailty: nutrition, cognition and physical function. The project produced 42 recommendations across clinical (screening, monitoring and managing of pre-frail older adults) technical (ICT-based innovations) and societal (health literacy in older adults, guidance to healthcare professional, patients, caregivers and policy makers) areas. This paper describes the 25 healthcare related recommendations of PERSSILAA, exploring how they could be used in the development of future European guidelines on the screening and prevention of frailty
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