Consumer-directed services: lessons and implications for integrated systems of care
Open Access
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- Published by Ubiquity Press, Ltd. in International Journal of Integrated Care
- Vol. 3 (2) , e12
- https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.80
Abstract
Over the past decade, policy makers in developed countries have begun to pay increasing attention to reform of the long-term care system for the frail elderly and younger people with disabilities. A continuum of strategies have generated interest, including integrated systems of care with agency/professionally managed service packages on the one end, and programs offering cash benefits along with the flexibility to decide how to best use these funds to meet individual needs and preferences, on the other. The latter approach, known as “consumer-directed care,” is found in various forms and degrees in Europe and North America. Primarily organised around the provision of home and community care, consumer-directed services are aimed at empowering clients and family carers, giving them major control over the what, who and when of needed care. Consumer-directed care appears to be the antithesis of integrated care. However, it actually holds important lessons and implications for the latter. This policy paper explores the rationale and models of consumer-directed services at home, reviews developments, designs and outcomes of programs in the Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, and the US. It also discusses how this experience could be helpful in shaping better and more responsive integrated models of care for vulnerable long term care populations.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Consumer-directed personal care services for older people in the U.S.2003
- Bringing Managed Care Home to People With Chronic, Disabling ConditionsJournal of Aging and Health, 2003
- Integrated care: meaning, logic, applications, and implications – a discussion paperInternational Journal of Integrated Care, 2002
- Care of the frail elderly in developed and developing countries: the experience and the challenges.Aging Clinical and Experimental Research, 2002
- Consumer-Directed Home and Community Services Programs in Eight StatesJournal of Aging & Social Policy, 2001
- Consumer-Directed Services At Home: A New Model For Persons With DisabilitiesHealth Affairs, 2001
- Can social insurance for long-term care work? The experience of Germany.Health Affairs, 2000
- Consumer-directed long-term care: participants' experiences in five countries.1999
- Consumer-Directed Models of Personal Care: Lessons from MedicaidThe Milbank Quarterly, 1996
- The Patient-Driven Interdisciplinary Care PlanJONA: The Journal of Nursing Administration, 1994