Apples and oranges? A review of evaluations of community-based long-term care.
- 1 October 1985
- journal article
- Vol. 20 (4) , 461-88
Abstract
This article synthesizes the contradictory findings of the community-based long-term care evaluation literature by grouping 13 studies into three models of care tested. All studies are reviewed according to tenets of internal and external/construct validity to ascertain what is "known" and "not known" about the effectiveness of this new type of care, and to specify areas needing further research. Findings suggest that increased preoperational specification of underlying theory, increased sophistication in targeting services to high-risk groups, use of multivariate analysis, and the development of more relevant outcome measures will improve the quality of future study findings, thereby contributing to theory and model building in this field.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Characteristics and Utilization Pattern of an Admission Cohort of Nursing Home PatientsThe Gerontologist, 1983
- Cost-effectiveness of community-based long-term care: current findings of Georgia's alternative health services project.American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- The triage experiment in coordinated care for the elderly.American Journal of Public Health, 1981
- Community-Based Long-Term Care and Mortality: Preliminary Findings of Georgia's Alternative Health Services ProjectThe Gerontologist, 1980
- The Wisconsin Community Care Organization: Preliminary Findings from the Milwaukee ExperimentThe Gerontologist, 1980
- Gaining Control of the Long Term Care System: First Returns from the ACCESS ExperimentThe Gerontologist, 1980
- Patient Outcomes in Alternative Long-Term Care SettingsMedical Care, 1978
- Psycho-Social Effects of Home Care: Results of a Randomized Controlled TrialInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1976
- Comparison of Care and Cost Outcomes for Stroke Patients With and Without Home CareStroke, 1974
- Older persons after hospitalization: a controlled study of home aide service.American Journal of Public Health, 1972