The point of departure for "Managing to Care" is widespread
concern that the present delivery of health and social welfare
services is fragmented, uncoordinated, inefficient, costly,
wasteful, and ultimately detrimental to clients' health and
wellbeing. Dill traces the evolution of case management from its
start as a tool for integrating services on the level of the
individual client to its current role as a force behind the most
significant trends in health care. Those trends include the
entrenchment of bureaucracy, the challenges of once dominant
professions, and the rise of corporate control. The author's
purpose in adopting this analysis is to invite further scrutiny of
the case management profession, and at the same time to identify
new possibilities for its application. This volume brings together
thoughts developed over many years of observing and participating
in case management programs. It provides a multilayered perspective
of case management, showing linkages among its social and
historical contexts and the ways it is practiced today in diverse
service settings. The author emerged convinced about the essential
need for care coordination, and that present ways of providing care
can work against our highest objectives in doing so. The paradoxes
and contraindications embedded in case management practice became a
major theme of the book. "Managing to Care" is highly critical of
the ways case management has come to absorb and reflect the
organizational flaws of the very service systems it was intended to
reform. Too often management of the case comes to dominate care.
The author does not call for a rejection of professional systems in
favor of a resurrected informal community. While much can and
should be done to strengthen our ties to one another, there will
always be people whose problems require more expert help. Dill
argues here that case management can provide such help, and provide
it well, but only if it is grounded in the human dimension of a
caring relationship. "Ann E. P. Dill," associate professor of
sociology and gender studies at Brown University, is a medical
sociologist and social gerontologist. Her research examines issues
affecting the long-term provision of health care and social
services, both in the United States and in countries formerly part
of Yugoslavia.
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