Academic literature on the topic 'Community home-based elderly care service'

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Journal articles on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Wang, Yi-Luo, Ying Duan, and Ying Zhang. "A Summary of Researches on the Quality of Home-based Care Services in China." Public Administration Research 10, no. 1 (March 20, 2021): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/par.v10n1p41.

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With the increase of the aging of the population in china, the demand of the elderly continues to increase, which has brought great challenges to the elderly care service industry. As a new type of elderly care service, home-based care services directly affect the quality of the elderly’s health and daily life in their later years. Therefore, improving the product and quality of elderly care services has become the goal and purpose of the development of home-based care service for aged. This article uses Cite Space software to perform visual analysis of keyword clustering on existing literature, and concludes that scholars focus on the integration of medical care, social elderly care service system, service quality, and influencing factors, but the impact of service quality models and indicator systems is low. Then through the integration and induction of scholars’ research progress on home care services, existing problems in service quality, and service quality evaluation index systems, in order to continue to innovate on the basis of existing knowledge, improve the service quality index system, and focus on combing process indicators with outcome indicators effectively, thereby improving the quality of community home care services.
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Kinney, Eleanor D., Jay A. Freedman, and Cynthia A. Loveland Cook. "Quality Improvement in Community-Based, Long-Term Care: Theory and Reality." American Journal of Law & Medicine 20, no. 1-2 (1994): 59–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0098858800006432.

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Community-based, long-term care has become an increasingly popular and needed service for the aged and disabled populations in recent years. These services witnessed a major expansion in 1981 when Congress created the Home and Community-Based Waiver authority for the Medicaid program. Currently, all states offer some complement of community-based, long-term care services to their elderly and disabled populations and nearly all states have Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services waivers which extend these services to their Medicaid eligible clients.An ever increasing proportion of the population is in need of community-based, long-term care services. Between nine and eleven million Americans of all ages are chronically disabled and require some help with tasks of daily living. In 1990, thirty percent of the elderly with at least one impaired activity of daily living used a community-based, long-term care service. Not surprisingly, expenditures for community-based, long-term care have increased.
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Coleman, Barbara J. "European Models of Long-Term Care in the Home and Community." International Journal of Health Services 25, no. 3 (July 1995): 455–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/fyp6-dlwy-wkkt-6nnj.

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In the 1980s, faced with a rapidly increasing elderly population and soaring costs of health and long-term care services, many European governments began to reexamine fiscal policies that often encouraged institutionalization of frail and dependent elders. A number of these countries have now turned to new models of home and community-based care. This report describes home care policies that serve the needs of frail elders in Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Great Britain, with special attention to experimental projects that have tested varying approaches for providing high quality, low-cost care in the home and in the community. The central governments in these countries have developed long-term care systems that improve quality of care, ensure more efficient delivery of services, and control or lower costs. They have (1) discouraged the building of additional nursing homes and instead supported the development and expansion of a range of housing alternatives; (2) shifted greater responsibility to local governments for delivering long-term care services, bringing those services closer to those who need them; (3) developed care management techniques that enable care providers to better target appropriate services to each elderly client; and (4) provided incentives for different types of care providers to coordinate their work, resulting in improved service delivery and greater client satisfaction.
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Shao, Qiuhu, Jingfeng Yuan, Jin Lin, Wei Huang, Junwei Ma, and Hongxing Ding. "A SBM-DEA based performance evaluation and optimization for social organizations participating in community and home-based elderly care services." PLOS ONE 16, no. 3 (March 17, 2021): e0248474. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248474.

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The community and home-based elderly care service system has been proved an effective pattern to mitigate the elderly care dilemma under the background of accelerating aging in China. In particular, the participation of social organizations in community and home-based elderly care service has powerfully fueled the multi-supply of elderly care. As the industry of the elderly care service is in the ascendant, the management lags behind, resulting in the waste of significant social resources. Therefore, performance evaluation is proposed to resolve this problem. However, a systematic framework for evaluating performance of community and home-based elderly care service centers (CECSCs) is absent. To overcome this limitation, the SBM-DEA model is introduced in this paper to evaluate the performance of CECSCs. 186 social organizations in Nanjing were employed as an empirical study to develop the systematic framework for performance evaluation. Through holistic analysis of previous studies and interviews with experts, a systematic framework with 33 indicators of six dimensions (i.e., financial management, hardware facilities, team building, service management, service object and organization construction) was developed. Then, Sensitivity Analysis is used to screen the direction of performance optimization and specific suggestions were put forward for government, industrial associations and CECSCs to implement. The empirical study shows the proposed framework using SBM-DEA and sensitivity analysis is viable for conducting performance evaluation and improvement of CECSCs, which is conducive to the sustainable development of CECSCs.
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Hokenstad, Alene. "More Care at Home: The Challenge of Creating Viable Community Alternatives to Nursing Home Care." Care Management Journals 6, no. 1 (March 2005): 9–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/cmaj.2005.6.1.9.

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Creating a national long-term care (LTC) delivery “infrastructure”—one that would make home-based care more accessible to people with extensive needs—will be a major undertaking. It will require new service organizations that have the authority to provide and coordinate an appropriate array of services. Medicaid Managed Long-Term Care (MLTC) and the Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) offer two promising examples of what the service organizations of the future might look like. The history of how these plans developed illuminates challenges that others will encounter. Further expansion of these types of organizations requires resolution of resource, staffing, and operational issues.
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Traphagan, John W. "Culture and Long-Term Care: The Bath as Social Service in Japan." Care Management Journals 5, no. 1 (March 2004): 53–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/cmaj.5.1.53.61263.

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A central feature of Japan’s approach to community-based care of the elderly, including long-term home health care, is the emphasis on providing bath facilities. For mobile elders, senior centers typically provide a public bathing facility in which people can enjoy a relaxing soak along with friends who also visit the centers. In terms of in-home long-term care, visiting bath services are provided to assist family care providers with the difficult task of bathing a frail or disabled elder—a task made more problematic as a result of the Japanese style of bathing. I argue that the bath, as social service, is a culturally shaped solution to a specific problem of elder care that arises in the Japanese context as a result of the importance of the bath in everyday life for Japanese. While the services may be considered specific to Japan, some aspects of bathing services, particularly the mobile bath service, may also have applicability in the United States.
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Bowman, Clive E. "Institutional care in the community: from chaos to integration of health and social care?" Reviews in Clinical Gerontology 7, no. 3 (August 1997): 189–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959259897007314.

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Distinguishing between health and social aspects of institutional care for frail elderly people remains confusing and contentious in the UK, even though health and community care reforms specifically sought to avoid such problems. Nursing home care in the UK has developed rapidly to 170 000 nursing home beds. Nursing home care now costs significantly more than the total committed to primary care. Some health authorities maintain a large commitment to long-term care provision in hospitals and contract nursing home beds; others have divested themselves of providing long-term care, becoming dependent on means-tested nursing home care provided by social services. Where 'free' health service contract nursing home beds are adjacent to social services means-tested placements the inconsistencies become even more perverse. Distinguishing between health and social patients/clients/supplicants on the basis of health or social care need is often impossible. Health Service responsibilities to support care home residents will become more onerous as cost pressures define the limits of social care for individuals and social services producers alike. There is, in addition, an unresolved tension between the professions associated with the care of elderly patients, who are seeking clear standards, and the hostile purchasing environment which fails to value the cost benefit, let alone the health gain of planned care management in deference to the Mammonism of treatment episodes.
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Liu, Tao, Taijiao Jiang, Mengqian Liu, and YangYang Ou. "Innovative design of community care services based on the concept of environmental sustainability." E3S Web of Conferences 245 (2021): 02035. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202124502035.

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China’s rural elderly population continues to grow, and rural elderly care faces more severe challenges than cities. The rapid growth of rural demand for elderly care services means that more resources are needed, and the process of depletion of a large amount of resources inevitably has an adverse impact on the environment. The green development and sustainable design concepts proposed in the design field can reduce the waste of resources and reduce the greatest impact of humans on the environment, and promote the harmonious development of man and nature. Therefore, this article applies environmental sustainability concepts and service design concepts to rural community elderly care services , to innovate the existing community pension service system. Based on the analysis of the behavior and demand characteristics of the elderly in rural areas, this paper proposes an innovative design case of sustainable elderly care community service combining community resources with the full potential of the elderly, which provides reference and inspiration for the construction of an elderly care community service system in rural areas.
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Montgomery, Patrick R., and Wendy M. Fallis. "South Winnipeg Integrated Geriatric Program (SWING): A Rapid Community-Response Program for the Frail Elderly." Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement 22, no. 3 (2003): 275–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0714980800003895.

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ABSTRACTThe objective of this study was to compare enhanced access to geriatric assessment and case management to usual home care service provision for the frail elderly. This was a demonstration project, with randomized allocation to control or intervention groups of frail elderly persons who had been referred to the Home Care service in Winnipeg. Of the 164 persons who were randomized, 78 intervention and 74 control patients were evaluated. Intervention subjects received a multidimensional assessment as soon as possible by a specially trained coordinator, who had enhanced access to geriatric medical and day-hospital services; intervention patients were case managed for a 3-month period. Control cases received usual care from home care coordinators. The intervention group received significantly faster assessment and deployment of home services, as well as greater utilization of the geriatric day-hospital services. Utilization of emergency room and hospital services was similar for both groups. Control subjects experienced more prolonged hospital stays and a significantly higher proportion (23%) were designated for long-term care than of intervention clients (9%). We conclude that the SWING program, which facilitated access to geriatric services and case management, reduced or delayed the need for long-term care.
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Litwin, Howard, and Ernie Lightman. "The Development of Community Care Policy for the Elderly: A Comparative Perspective." International Journal of Health Services 26, no. 4 (October 1996): 691–708. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/387a-f71l-qadx-9bp7.

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A comparison of the development of community care for the elderly in the province of Ontario, Canada, and in the State of Israel is presented in the light of the economic constraints currently challenging the expansion of welfare state services. The inquiry identified several common issues regarding the nature of the policy mandate for long-term care delivered in the home, the structure of the service delivery system, and matters concerning funding arrangements for community care. Issues that emerged in both settings include the relationship between health and social services in the delivery of care at the local level; the separation of purchaser and provider functions; the question of needs-driven versus service-driven social care provisions; accessibility concerns and the aspiration for one-stop entry to the delivery system; the growing involvement of the private sector in the delivery of domiciliary-based personal care services; and the relative paucity of current efforts to address the needs of family caregivers.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Larsson, Kristina. "According to need? : Predicting use of formal and informal care in a Swedish urban elderly population." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Dept. of Social Work [Institutionen för socialt arbete], Univ, 2004. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-109.

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Cohen, Adrienne Lynn. "Support Networks of Rural Older Adults with Self-Care Challenges." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1302028258.

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張學泰 and Xuetai Zhang. "Community-based care for the frail elderly in urban China." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2002. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31243903.

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Davis, Patricia K. "Financing Home and Community-Based Long-Term Care: Adult Children Caregiver Perspectives." DigitalCommons@USU, 2009. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/530.

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Large numbers of baby boomers and a shift towards home-based long-term care designate a need for a greater understanding of caregiver attitudes surrounding the financing of long-term home-based care. This study examined more fully the types of home-based long-term care services that family caregivers were utilizing for their parents. In addition, the willingness and ability of caregivers to privately fund these services for aging parents were explored. The study utilized a preexisting data set of qualitative interviews that were conducted with 30 family caregivers helping to provide long-term care for an elderly parent or older-generation relative. Participants in the sample used many home- and community-based services such as home health aides and nurses, physical therapists, cleaning services and adult day centers. Often these services were funded via Medicare, Medicaid, care recipient funds, state programs, and caregiver funds. In addition, caregivers were often willing, but unable to pay for long-term parent care on their own. Many caregivers in the study found paying for long-term parent care unnecessary. Family expectations, moral and religious responsibility, and a high aversion to nursing home care were cited as reasons for willingness to fund long-term care at home. Similarly, lack of family support and other personal obstacles were noted as reasons for inability to pay for care. Those who found payment for care unnecessary noted that care recipients had sufficient funds for their own long-term care.
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Lee, Bible. "The prospect of implementing a community based home telehealth service for chronic care intervention." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Health Sciences, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7645.

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Worldwide, the numbers of people living with chronic conditions are rapidly on the rise. Chronic illnesses are enduring and often cannot be cured, requiring a strategy for long term management and intervention to prevent further exacerbation. Globally, there has been an increase in interventions using telecommunications technologies to aid patients in their home setting to manage chronic illnesses. Such interventions have often been delivered by nurses. The purpose of this research was to assess whether a particular intervention that had been successfully implemented in the United Kingdom could also be implemented in Canterbury. In particular, this research assessed the perspectives of Canterbury based practice nurses and district nurses. The findings suggest that a majority of both district and practice nurses did not view the service as compatible with their current work situation. Existing workload and concerns over funding of the proposed service were identified as potential barriers. However, the service was perceived as potentially beneficial for some, with the elderly based in rural areas, or patients with chronic mental health needs identified as more likely to benefit than others. Practice nurses expressed strong views on who should deliver such services. Given that it was identified that practice nurses already have in-depth knowledge of their patients’ health, while valuing the strong relationships established with their communities, it was suggested that patients would most benefit from locally based nurses to deliver any community based health services in the future. It was also found that teletriaging is currently widely used by practice nurses across Canterbury to meet a range of health needs, including chronic mental health needs. This suggests that the scope of teletriaging in community health and its potential and full implications are currently not well understood in New Zealand. Significant events, such as the Christchurch earthquakes indicate the potential role of teletriaging in addressing mental health issues, thereby reducing the chronic health burden in the community.
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Slominski, Emily Ann. "Perspectives of Case Managers in Community-Based Elder Care: Work Roles, Stresses, Mediators, and Rewards." Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1218046656.

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Ramuhaheli, Rendani Marcia. "Challenges experienced by community organization in the provision of HIV/AIDS home based care." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2010. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&action=viewtitle&id=gen8Srv25Nme4_5150_1367481640.

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In many developing countries including South Africa, there is an overwhelming number of people infected with HIV/AIDS in the hospitals, which the health care workers are unable to cope with. Therefore, an urgent need to develop alternative community based activities such as support groups, home based care programs and placement of 
orphans, for the provision of social health care services to the HIV client, arises. However, a deeper understanding of the challenges facing community organizations when 
providing home based care is crucial and necessary in order to formulate effective and relevant care services. The aim of the study was to explore the challenges faced by Umtha 
elanga Community Organization (UWCO) in the provision of HIV/AIDS home based care. The objectives of the study were to assess the current home based care of the UWCO and to explore the challenges that community based organizations have to face when providing care services to people being infected and affected by HIV/AIDS. The research design undertaken was the case study of UWCO. The qualitative approach with in-depth interviews with the 
management staff and home based caregivers was utilized. Data analysis began immediately after the interviews by transcribing and translating the audio-taped data. Thematic analysis was used in which data was coded and categorized. The findings of the research 
indicated that the home based care programme assists PLWHA clients in their natural home setting. All home based carers work voluntary and get supported by the organization as 
ell as by the department of social development and health such as the social workers. Finances appear to be, both for the organization and the home based carers, a huge 
hindrance. Research indicated that the organization experiences various challenges to provide the service to their community. It is recommended that Government must ensure that 
home based care workers get recognition, credit and support for their valuable contribution. Training for HBC employers needs to be extended to expose and add more skills. This 
will ensure that they are equipped for their tasks. Home based care workers must become registered and paid better salaries by the government.

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Hollander, Marcus J. "The cost-effectiveness of community based long term care services for the elderly compared to residential care : a British Columbia perspective." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape8/PQDD_0021/NQ41370.pdf.

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Ip, Kam-man, and 葉錦雯. "Retrospective cohort study on the relationship between participation in the Enhanced Home and Community Care Services (EHCCS) program andhypertension control among Chinese elderly." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2011. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B46937651.

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Qin, Yuan. "Urban community home based elderly care service system: the dilemma between demand and supply in the city of Wuhan, China." Doctoral thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/22621.

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Against a background of global ageing, the problem of ageing has become the basic national condition of China in the 21st century. China's ageing population presents the following characteristics: it is a large-scale, rapid process, an "ageing but not affluent society"; with an inclination to senility, and large regional differences. Wuhan City, in the Hubei Province, is a core city of central China. The basic characteristics of ageing in Wuhan are consistent with the national characteristics. China's rapid ageing coexists with a social background of not affluent population. As the ageing problem becomes gradually more serious, Community Home-based Elderly Care Services (CHECS) will also come under increasing pressure. With the availability of CHECS in China, as well as in Wuhan City, being restricted by scarce social resources and, therefore, unable to meet elderly's demand for services, the supply and demand for CHECS is seriously unbalanced. With the aim of solving this dilemma, the following research objectives have been defined in this thesis: the definition of CHECS and the reason for taking it as the basic supporting system for the elderly; the content of CHECS in Wuhan and the influencing factors of the elderly’s demand for CHECS; the review and analysis of elderly care policies in China and Wuhan City over the last 20 years, including the identification of current supply problems and influencing factors; a theoretical model of CHECS demand and supply is formed; and suggestions on improving the CHECS system in Wuhan are put forward. This thesis uses the Grounded Theory approach and qualitative research methods, including document analysis, participatory observation and in-depth interviews for data collection. Theoretical categorization of collected data was carried out with the coding method that allowed main categories to be extracted and the relationship between categories to be identified to form a substantive theoretical framework of the Demand and Supply of CHECS. In its analysis of the supply of CHECS, this thesis has thoroughly combed through the development context and content of China's elderly care policy in the past two decades, and identified two stages for China's elderly care policy: the normative development stage and the improving stage. Based on the influencing factors analyses, the CHECS demand and supply theoretical model was built. A further finding was that under the limited influence of government and limited resources, the supply of elderly home based care services by the community undergoes a dual problem of policy formulation and policy implementation, which arises from the defects present in the relationship between the different service provision actors.
Sob o pano de fundo do envelhecimento global, o envelhecimento tornou-se um problema nacional básica da China no século XXI. O envelhecimento da população Chinesa caracteriza-se por ter sido um processo rápido e em larga escala, por resultar numa sociedade envelhecida, mas não afluente, uma tendência para a senilidade e pela existência de grandes diferenças regionais. A cidade de Wuhan situa-se na China central na província de Hubei. As características básicas do envelhecimento em Wuhan são consistentes com as características a nível nacional. O rápido envelhecimento da China coexiste com um contexto social de carência. À medida que o problema do envelhecimento se torna mais sério, os serviços comunitários de assistência domiciliária (CHECS) sentem uma pressão acrescida. Com os escassos recursos disponíveis quer na China, quer na cidade de Wuhan, é impossível responder à procura deste tipo de serviços, o que provoca um desequilíbrio sério entre a procura e a capacidade de oferta. Esta tese tem como principal objetivo resolver este problema, tendo sido definidos os seguintes subobjetivos: a definição de CHECS e a justificação para ser considerado como serviço básico de apoio à população idosa; o conteúdo deste tipo de serviço em Wuhan e os fatores que influenciam a sua procura pelos idosos; revisão e análise das políticas públicas de apoio aos idosos nos últimos 20 anos, na China e em Wuhan, incluindo a identificação dos atuais problemas e dos fatores que influenciam a oferta de serviços; desenha-se um modelo teórico para a procura e oferta de CHECS; e propõem-se sugestões para a melhoria do CHECS em Wuhan. Esta tese usa a metodologia da Grounded Theory e métodos de investigação qualitativos, incluindo a análise documental, a observação participativa e entrevistas em profundidade, para a recolha de informação. Dos dados recolhidos foram extraídas categorias teóricas com a ajuda do método de codificação, tendo sido também identificadas as relações entre categorias, bem como o quadro conceptual para a Procura e Oferta de CHECS. No âmbito da oferta de CHECS, esta tese examina em detalhe o desenvolvimento contextual e o conteúdo das políticas publicas chinesas de apoio aos idosos nas últimas duas décadas, tendo identificado dois estádios: o estádio de desenvolvimento normativo e o estádio de melhoria. Constrói-se um modelo teórico para a procura e oferta de CHECS com base nos fatores explicativos das duas variáveis. Perante a influência limitada do governo e a existência de recursos limitados, é possível concluir que a oferta de serviços comunitários de apoio domiciliário à população idosa de um duplo problema de formulação e implementação das políticas, derivado das deficiências presentes na relação entre os diferentes fornecedores de serviços.
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Books on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Folkemer, Donna. State use of home & community-based services for the aged under Medicaid: Waiver programs, personal care, frail elderly services and home health services. Washington, DC: Public Policy Institute, American Association of Retired Persons, 1994.

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Folkemer, Donna. State use of home & community-based services for the aged under Medicaid: Waiver programs, personal care, frail elderly services and home health services. Washington, DC: Public Policy Institute, American Association of Retired Persons, 1994.

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Cameron, Elaine. The Community Care Project: Physically disabled, frail elderly and elderly mentally infirm people and the home help service. Birmingham: Health Services' Research Centre, University of Birmingham, 1989.

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United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Human Resources, ed. A bill to establish a program for the provision of home and community based services to elderly individuals. Washington, D.C: U.S. G.P.O., 1985.

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New Hampshire. Office of the Legislative Budget Assistant. State of New Hampshire, Division of Elderly and Adult Services: Home and community-based care : performance audit report, April 2003. Concord, N.H.]: State of New Hampshire, Office of Legislative Budget Assistant, 2003.

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United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Human Resources. Home and Community Based Services for the Elderly Act of 1985: Report (to accompany S. 1181) (including cost estimate of the Congressional Budget Office). [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. G.P.O., 1985.

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Home- and community-based care: Expanding options for long-term care : hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, September 25, 2007. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2007.

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United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance. Home- and community-based care: Expanding options for long-term care : hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, September 25, 2007. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2007.

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United States. Congress. Senate. A bill to amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to improve the program related to home and community based care and community supported living arrangements, and for other purposes. [Washington, D.C.?]: [United States Government Printing Office], 1993.

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Aging, United States Congress b. House Select Committee on. From medicare to in-home services: Community-based health care for Nebraska's elderly : hearing before the Select Committee on Aging, House of Representatives, Ninety-eighth Congress, first session, August 12, 1983, Omaha, NE. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Zhang, Zhizheng, and Yajun Li. "Exploring the Elders’ Information Needs on Home-Based Care: A Community Service Perspective." In Human Aspects of IT for the Aged Population. Aging, Design and User Experience, 498–509. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58530-7_38.

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Alam, Mohammad A., Weiqiang Wang, Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed, and William Chu. "Elderly Safety: A Smartphone Based Real Time Approach." In Inclusive Society: Health and Wellbeing in the Community, and Care at Home, 134–42. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39470-6_17.

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Zhuo, Rongqing, and Xin Sun. "Design of Personalized Service System for Home-Based Elderly Care Based on Data Fusion." In Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 412–19. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-2568-1_57.

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Ogasawara, Koichi. "User-Driven Innovation and Knowledge Integration in Elderly Care Services: A Community Integration Model." In Practice-Based Innovation: Insights, Applications and Policy Implications, 345–67. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-21723-4_18.

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Lyu, Aobo, Xian Cheng, Ying Zhao, Liang Zhou, and Hongjiao Fu. "Research on the Demands of the Elderly in the Community Home-Based Care Model." In Communications in Computer and Information Science, 52–65. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-3631-8_6.

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Sasidhar, Sangit, Sanjib Kumar Panda, and Jianxin Xu. "A Wavelet Feature Based Mechanomyography Classification System for a Wearable Rehabilitation System for the Elderly." In Inclusive Society: Health and Wellbeing in the Community, and Care at Home, 45–52. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39470-6_6.

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Martico-Greenfield, Theresa. "Nursing Home-Based Community Care." In Successful Models of Community Long Term Care Services for the Elderly, 31–35. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315791784-8.

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Reygan, Finn, and Jamil Khan. "Sexual and gender diversity, ageing and elder care in South Africa: voices and realities." In Intersections of Ageing, Gender and Sexualities, 171–86. Policy Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447333029.003.0011.

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While South Africa is a world leader in terms of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) rights, the disjuncture between policy and practice—especially for more invisible cohorts within LGBTI communities—means that the formal rights that exist are often not translated into practice. There is no research to date in South Africa on sexual and gender minority ageing and LGBTI elders remain almost entirely invisible in terms of policy and public service provision. The chapter focuses on African perspectives on ageing and presents the narrative account of an older lesbian couple. Findings are that the experiences of ageing for African LGBTI elders are necessarily inflected through community norms and through power, privilege and oppression. Recommendations include the capacitation of home based support services to engage the needs of LGBTI elders and the inclusion of sexual and gender diversity in policy and approaches to the care of older people
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Grau, Lois. "Home Care Services: Non-Professional Home Attendants." In Successful Models of Community Long Term Care Services for the Elderly, 19–24. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315791784-6.

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Lynch, Kate, Daniel T. H. Lai, and Rezaul Begg. "Detection of Gait Patterns in Challenging Environments." In Encyclopedia of Healthcare Information Systems, 425–33. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-889-5.ch054.

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One in three individuals over the age of 65 years (elderly) will fall at least once a year (James, 1993). This probability increases to one in two adults over 80 years (DHA, 2005). Consequently, gait modifications associated with ageing have been linked with increased falls’ probability (Berg, Alessio, Mills, & Tong, 1997; Lord, Sherrington, & Menz, 2001). Despite an increasing research interest in recent times into the aetiology of falls, particularly in the elderly (>65 years), falls continue to be a major public health concern in Australia and worldwide. Fall-related injuries are the leading cause of accidental death in the elderly population, and account for the largest cause of hospitalisation for this population (Lord et al., 2001), with many elderly individuals experiencing physical, social, or functional ramifications following a fall. Consequently, the economic cost of falls to the public health system is escalating, with the total cost of fall injuries reported to be higher than road traffic injuries (DOH, 2004). The majority of falls associated costs include physician consultation, hospital stays, nursing homecare, rehabilitation, medical equipment, home modification and care, community based services, and prescription drugs and administration (DOH, 2004; Lord et al., 2001). Healthcare and related costs associated with falls are expected to double over the next 50 years (Close & Lord, 2006).
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Conference papers on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Kang, Hongge, and Guowang Zhang. "The Study of the Model of Community Service for Home Care of the Elderly at New Period." In 2014 International Conference on Information, Business and Education Technology (ICIBET 2014). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icibet-14.2014.25.

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Zhang, Zehao, Jingen Du, Kun Lan, and Min Tang. "How to build a standard system of community care service for elderly? A research based on the condition of China." In 2016 International Conference on Logistics, Informatics and Service Sciences (LISS). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/liss.2016.7854559.

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Zhang, Zehao, Min Tang, Kun Lan, and Jingen Du. "Exploring the service quality of community care for the elderly from multiple perspectives - based on a survey of eastern, middle and western China." In 2016 IEEE International Conference on Management of Innovation and Technology (ICMIT). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icmit.2016.7605027.

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Jiang, Xue. "Development and research on community home-based care service in China." In 2016 International Conference on Economy, Management and Education Technology. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icemet-16.2016.101.

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Qiu, Min, Dandan Chen, Yilian Bian, Ziyi Sun, and Zhijie Xie. "Research on Innovation Path of Internet Plus Home-based Elderly Care Service Model." In 2020 International Conference on Urban Engineering and Management Science (ICUEMS). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icuems50872.2020.00105.

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Li, Xiaoqin, and Jing Wang. "Fuzzy Comprehensive Evaluation of Aged Community Home-Care Service Quality Based on AHP." In 2016 International Conference on Advances in Management, Arts and Humanities Science (AMAHS 2016). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/amahs-16.2016.24.

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Luo, Sheng, Wei Li, Jin Zhang, Shanju Hu, Cuiping Zhang, Yi Dong, and Li Luo. "Research on the Demand and Countermeasure of Home-based Care for the Elderly in Rural Community." In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Humanities Education and Social Sciences (ICHESS 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ichess-19.2019.20.

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Boulanger, J. Reerink, and C. Deroussent. "Preliminary Based Service Evaluation for Elderly People and Healthcare Professionals in Residential Home Care Units." In Second International Conference on the Digital Society. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icds.2008.36.

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Ma, Rong. "Research on the Social Support System of Urban Community Services for Home Care of Elderly from the Perspective of Active Aging." In IPEC 2021: 2021 2nd Asia-Pacific Conference on Image Processing, Electronics and Computers. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3452446.3452468.

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"Research on Social Work Intervention in Community Home-based Care Service from the Perspective of Active Aging." In 2020 International Conference on Social and Human Sciences. Scholar Publishing Group, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.38007/proceedings.0000071.

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Reports on the topic "Community home-based elderly care service"

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Yuebin, Xu. Development and Performance of the Elderly Care System in the People’s Republic of China. Asian Development Bank, August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/wps210303-2.

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This paper attempts to understand and provide policy recommendations on the development and performance of the emerging elderly care system in the People’s Republic of China. The three-tiered elderly system in the country consists of home-based care as the core support, community-based care as necessary support, and residential care as supplementary support. The main policies and progress of the system are explained, including insights on how the government encourages private sector involvement. A key recommendation of this paper is the need for better integration of residential and home- and community-based care as part of the elderly care system.
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A client-centered approach to reproductive health: A trainer's manual. Population Council, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh16.1015.

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This training manual grew out of a project to improve the quality of care rendered by public-sector providers of reproductive health services. Implemented by the Population Council in collaboration with the Ministries of Population, Welfare, and Health, in Pakistan, the project extended beyond improving the quality of care provided by family planning workers and incorporated health workers who provided maternal and child health services. The success of all efforts made by the service delivery system in attracting and keeping clients depends upon the content and quality of interaction when the client comes in contact with the provider—whether the client is visiting a clinic or being visited by a community-based worker at home. To offer good quality of care, the provider should treat the client with dignity and respect, assess her reproductive health needs by asking questions rather than making assumptions based on her profile, and help her negotiate a solution appropriate to her circumstances. This training manual is oriented toward improving providers’ interpersonal skills. Emphasis is placed on the client and helping her meet her own needs rather than on meeting artificial goals or targets.
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