Long-term care in international perspective
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- Vol. 1988, 145-155
Abstract
The findings of a study of long-term care policies in 18 countries are reported in this article. Initial data were collected by a questionnaire survey under the auspices of the International Social Security Association. These data were supplemented by published documents and government statistics obtained while researching long-term care for the International Social Security Association and, subsequently, for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The principal focus is a cross-national comparison of institutionalization rates for the elderly. Differences in use rates for medically oriented facilities are less than those for nonmedical residential long-term care facilities. Only a small amount of variation is related to demographic differences, such as older or more female elderly populations in those countries with higher institutionalization rates. Included also is a description of the modes of financing long-term care.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Caregivers of the Frail Elderly: A National ProfileThe Gerontologist, 1987
- Family Care of the Elderly: The Role of Public PolicyThe Milbank Quarterly, 1986
- The Fourth Stage of the Epidemiologic Transition: The Age of Delayed Degenerative DiseasesThe Milbank Quarterly, 1986
- Parent Care as a Normative Family StressThe Gerontologist, 1985
- Family Support of the Australian Aged: A Comparison with the United StatesThe Gerontologist, 1983
- Institutionalized and the non-institutionalized elderlySocial Science & Medicine, 1982
- The National Nursing Home Survey: 1977 summary for the United States.1979
- Social Myth as Hypothesis: The Case of the Family Relations of Old PeopleThe Gerontologist, 1979