Determining the appropriate level of care. An analysis of factors affecting the staff's overall needs assessments, using data collected through the ASIM monitoring system
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine
- Vol. 23 (3) , 209-215
- https://doi.org/10.1177/140349489502300312
Abstract
For the purpose of evaluating the validity of the staff's overall needs assessment in terms of the ‘appropriate level of care’ as a measure of resource needs — with particular emphasis on the need for institutional resources — an analysis was made concerning the relation of the assessment to various other factors. In the analysis, we used data collected in a survey undertaken in Solna municipality on November 1, 1991 according to the ASIM monitoring system. It was found by multiple regression analysis, that the ‘appropriate level of care’ was closely related to the client's degree of disability, age, and actual level of care. On the other hand, variables describing the client's social situation — marital status, single-living, informal social support, standard and accessibility of housing — bore no relation to the assessment of need for institutional care. Chiefly because of the close relation to the actual level of care it was concluded that the staff's overall assessment of ‘appropriate level of care’ should be used with a degree of caution as measure of the need for institutional resources, since it would tend to overrate that need. A more systematic needs assessment procedure is required in order to provide the municipal authorities with unbiased estimates of institutional resource needs.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- De-institutionalization and ageing: some results from monitoring the effects in an area-based system of long-term care for elderly people and people with disabilitiesHealth & Social Care in the Community, 2007
- Disability development and the structure of care: some results from simulation of an area-based system of long-term care for elderly peopleHealth Policy, 1994
- Allocation of Care and Services in an Area-Based System for Long-Term Care of Elderly and Disabled PeopleAgeing and Society, 1994
- Disability transitions in an area-based system of long-term care for the elderly and disabledHealth Policy, 1994
- The residential home – what difference does it make?: Comparing the public systems of care for the elderly and disabled in two Swedish municipalitiesScandinavian Journal of Social Welfare, 1993
- How Important is Functional Status as a Predictor of Service Use by Older People?Journal of Aging and Health, 1990
- Transitions between community and nursing home residence in an urban elderly populationJournal of Community Health, 1990
- A prospective study of long-term care institutionalization among the aged.American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- A Patient-Classification System for Long-Term CareMedical Care, 1982
- Social Support Networks, Patient Status, and InstitutionalizationResearch on Aging, 1981