Quality of care from the perspective of elderly people: the QUOTE-elderly instrument. (33/1026)

BACKGROUND: patient views on the quality of care are usually assessed by means of patient satisfaction questionnaires. AIM: to develop an instrument that would: (i) produce data related to the expectations and experiences of noninstitutionalized elderly people, (ii) contain items that had been formulated in collaboration with elderly people, (iii) measure quality from the perspective of the users of health care services and (iv) produce data on generic quality aspects and quality aspects specifically related to the needs of elderly people. METHODS: we developed the instrument for measuring quality of care from the perspective of non-institutionalized elderly people (QUOTE-Elderly) by using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods. We obtained empirical data on the opinions and experiences of 338 elderly people. We evaluated the taxonomy of the instrument, internal consistency of (sub)scales and the feasibility of the instrument using explorative and confirmative factor analyses and reliability analysis. RESULTS: using scale optimization, we produced a self-administered questionnaire on quality of health care from the perspective of elderly people. This contains scientific characteristics and provides specific information for practical quality-assurance policies.  (+info)

Women's anxiety in old age and long-term care provision for the elderly. (34/1026)

The purpose of this study was to verify the differences in women's anxiety in old age, the expected long-term care provision, and the expected final location for terminal care for the women themselves and for their parents. In addition, we examined factors that related to their anxiety and needs. The subjects were 1,000 women of the Seikatsu Club customer cooperative association in Chiba; 539 responded to our survey. The subjects were more anxious for their parents than for themselves. They more strongly expected long-term care for their parents to be provided by their family than they expected the same for themselves. Although no differences were observed in the expected location for terminal care, most subjects expected their home to be the terminal location. Analysis by the multiple logistic regression model indicated that the following factors were significantly related to the anxiety in old age: age odds ratio [OR = 1.81], employment [OR = 2.25] for women, and planning to live with parents [OR = 2.42], housing conditions [OR = 0.56] for parents. The following factors were significantly related to the expected long-term care provision: age [OR = 2.22] for women, and age [OR = 2.15], living with parents [OR = 3.58], and employment [OR = 2.33] for parents. Age [OR = 2.14] for women, and planning to live with parents [OR = 2.09] for parents were significantly related to the expected final location of terminal care. This survey showed that women expected long-term care for their parents to be provided by their family, while many expected public long-term care services for themselves. This is the biggest difference in women's outlook on long-term care for their parents and for themselves. Multivariate analysis suggested that women aged 40 years or over, who will need long-term care in the future, tended to expect public home care services for themselves. It is virtually certain that the demand for public home care services will increase in the future.  (+info)

Rearranging the compartments: the financing and delivery of care for Australia's elderly. (35/1026)

Aged care policy in Australia underwent rapid change following the 1996 change of federal government, although continuing to emphasize changing the balance of aged care away from residential care toward community-based care and improving quality of care. This paper examines these policy directions with reference to two specific areas: the differentiation of funding arrangements for the care and accommodation components of residential care, and the targeting of services in community care. In both cases, funding arrangements have been used as a prime mechanism for redrawing the boundaries between different components and levels of care. This process of compartmentalization appears likely to increase the diversity of the Australian aged care system in the future.  (+info)

Population aging: a comparison among industrialized countries. (36/1026)

Increasing longevity and declining fertility rates are shifting the age distribution of populations in industrialized countries toward older age groups. Some countries will experience this demographic shift before others will. In this DataWatch we compare the effects of population aging on health spending, retirement policies, use of long-term care services, workforce composition, and income across eight countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. International comparisons suggest that the United States is generally well positioned to cope with population aging; however, three areas should be carefully monitored: heavy reliance on private-sector funding of retirement, coverage of pharmaceuticals for the elderly, and a high proportion of private long-term care financing.  (+info)

The elderly in five nations: the importance of universal coverage. (37/1026)

This paper reports 1999 survey results on the population age sixty-five and older in five nations--Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The majority of respondents were generally satisfied with the quality, affordability, and availability of health services in their nations. In many measures of access to and cost of care, the United States looks much like the other nations surveyed. However, as the elderly view their health systems, the direction they have taken in recent years with respect to caring for the elderly, and the future affordability of care in old age, U.S. respondents tended to be more pessimistic than were those in other nations.  (+info)

Domiciliary visits to the old and the mentally ill: how valuable? (38/1026)

In the early days of the British National Health Service, domiciliary visits were a continuation of the tradition whereby general practitioners (GPs) met consultants in the patient's home. The nature of domiciliary visits, which still attract a special fee, has since changed. We analysed the effectiveness of all domiciliary visits undertaken in a NHS trust providing primary care, mental health and elderly care services to a population of 470,000. Data were obtained from domiciliary visit claim forms and from questionnaires completed by the consultant, the referring GP and consultant peer reviewers. The largest number of visits (total 234) was in geriatric medicine 48.9%, followed by old-age psychiatry 44.9%. Geriatric medicine was more likely than psychiatry to admit patients to hospital (19%) after a visit. All domiciliary visits in old-age psychiatry were done during the day (9 am to 5 pm). Only 2% of GPs stated that they attended any of the domiciliary visits; almost all thought that the outcome of domiciliary visits was of value. Old-age-psychiatry peer reviewers believed that all visits in that specialty were appropriate; in geriatric medicine this figure was 77% and in other psychiatric specialties 65%. The findings indicate that domiciliary visits were not being used routinely as a pathway to hospital admission, though they were often used to expedite admission or gain a quick consultant opinion; the visits were valued by GPs. The practice of domiciliary visits differs greatly from the definition in NHS terms and conditions of service. One or other should be altered.  (+info)

Community, service, and policy strategies to improve health care access in the changing urban environment. (39/1026)

Urban communities continue to face formidable historic challenges to improving public health. However, reinvestment initiatives, changing demographics, and growth in urban areas are creating changes that offer new opportunities for improving health while requiring that health systems be adapted to residents' health needs. This commentary suggests that health care improvement in metropolitan areas will require setting local, state, and national agendas around 3 priorities. First, health care must reorient around powerful population dynamics, in particular, cultural diversity, growing numbers of elderly, those in welfare-workplace transition, and those unable to negotiate an increasingly complex health system. Second, communities and governments must assess the consequences of health professional shortages, safety net provider closures and conversions, and new marketplace pressures in terms of their effects on access to care for vulnerable urban populations; they must also weigh the potential value of emerging models for improving those populations' care. Finally, governments at all levels should use their influence through accreditation, standards, tobacco settlements, and other financing streams to educate and guide urban providers in directions that respond to urban communities' health care needs.  (+info)

Age, costs of acute and long-term care and proximity to death: evidence for 1987-88 and 1994-95 in British Columbia. (40/1026)

BACKGROUND: the consequences of ageing populations for health care costs have become a concern for governments and health care funders in most countries. However, there is increasing evidence that costs are more closely related to proximity to death than to age. This means that projections using age-specific costs will exaggerate the impact of ageing. Previous studies of the relationship of age, proximity to death and costs have been restricted to acute medical care. OBJECTIVE: to assess the effects of age and proximity to death on costs of both acute medical care and nursing and social care, and to assess if this relationship was stable in a time of rapid change in health care expenditure. DESIGN AND METHODS: we compared all decedents in the chosen age categories for the years 1987-88 and 1994-95 with all survivors in the same age groups. We measured use of health and social care for each individual using the British Columbia linked data, and costs of care assessed by multiplying the number of services by the unit cost of each service. SETTING: the Province of British Columbia. SUBJECTS: all decedents in 1987-88 and 1994-95 in British Columbia in the chosen age groups, and all survivors in the same age groups. RESULTS: costs of acute care rise with age, but the proximity to death is a more important factor in determining costs. The additional costs of dying fall with age. In contrast, costs of nursing and social care rise with age, but additional costs for those who are dying increase with age. Similar patterns were found for the two cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: age is less important than proximity to death as a predictor of costs. However, the pattern of social and nursing care costs is different from that for acute medical care. In planning services it is important to take into account the relatively larger impact of ageing on social and nursing care than on acute care.  (+info)