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Demographic and epidemiological changes mean that frail older
people have come to be seen as an expensive problem for health care
systems. The challenge for professionals and policy-makers is to
find ways to respond to the coming crisis by delivering
high-quality care in the home. This collection offers a critical
analysis of home care policy and practice. It focuses on how
high-quality care is provided and the practices and policies that
support this. It offers case studies (both policy- and
practice-oriented empirical studies) from countries that share a
basic orientation to social welfare: Canada, Denmark, Finland,
Iceland, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The nine chapters set out a
critical agenda for the development of "good" practices in
challenging times. This book is essential reading for students,
practitioners and researchers who wish to understand diverse
problems in care provision for frail older persons and the
complexities of policy responses in different health and social
care contexts.
What 'kind' of community is demanded by a problem like dementia? As
aspects of care continue to transition from institutional to
community and home settings, this book considers the implications
for people living with dementia and their carers. Drawing on
extensive fieldwork and case studies from Canada, this book
analyses the intersections of formal dementia strategies and the
experiences of families and others on the frontlines of care.
Considering the strains placed on care systems by the COVID-19
pandemic, this book looks afresh at what makes home-based care
possible or impossible and how these considerations can help
establish a deeper understanding necessary for good policy and
practice.
Demographic and epidemiological changes mean that frail older
people have come to be seen as an expensive problem for health care
systems. The challenge for professionals and policy-makers is to
find ways to respond to the coming crisis by delivering
high-quality care in the home. This collection offers a critical
analysis of home care policy and practice. It focuses on how
high-quality care is provided and the practices and policies that
support this. It offers case studies (both policy- and
practice-oriented empirical studies) from countries that share a
basic orientation to social welfare: Canada, Denmark, Finland,
Iceland, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The nine chapters set out a
critical agenda for the development of "good" practices in
challenging times. This book is essential reading for students,
practitioners and researchers who wish to understand diverse
problems in care provision for frail older persons and the
complexities of policy responses in different health and social
care contexts.
What 'kind' of community is demanded by a problem like dementia? As
aspects of care continue to transition from institutional to
community and home settings, this book considers the implications
for people living with dementia and their carers. Drawing on
extensive fieldwork and case studies from Canada, this book
analyses the intersections of formal dementia strategies and the
experiences of families and others on the frontlines of care.
Considering the strains placed on care systems by the COVID-19
pandemic, this book looks afresh at what makes home-based care
possible or impossible and how these considerations can help
establish a deeper understanding necessary for good policy and
practice.
Philosophy of Nursing: 5 Questions is a collection of short
interviews based on 5 questions presented to some of the most
prominent scholars in this field. We hear their views on
philosophical aspects that pertain to nursing practice, education,
and research, and how their work fits in these respects. Interviews
with David Allen, Peter Allmark, Patricia Benner, Karin Dahlberg,
John S Drummond, Katie Eriksson, Sally Gadow, Ann Gallagher, Dave
Holmes, Trevor Hussey, June Kikuchi, Timothy Kirk, Kari Martinsen,
Per Nortvedt, John Paley, Mary Ellen Purkis, Mark Risjord, Gary
Rolfe, Trudy Rudge, Anneli Sarvimaki, Anne Scott, Derek Sellman,
Sally Thorne, Francine Wynn
From physical location to payment processes to expectations of both
patients and caregivers, nearly everything surrounding the
contemporary medical clinic's central activity has changed since
Michel Foucualt's Birth of the Clinic. Indebted to that work, but
recognizing the gap between what the modern clinic hoped to be and
what it has become, Rebirth of the Clinic explores medical
practices that shed light on the fraught relationship between
medical systems, practitioners, and patients. Combining theory,
history, and ethnography, the contributors to this volume ground
today's clinic in a larger scheme of power relations, identifying
the cultural, political, and economic pressures that frame clinical
relationships, including the instrumentalist definition of health,
actuarial-based medical practices, and patient self-help movements,
which simultaneously hem in and create the conditions under which
agents creatively change ideas of illness and treatment. From
threatened community health centers in poor African American
locales to innovative nursing practices among the marginally housed
citizens of Canada's poorest urban neighborhood, this volume
addresses not just the who, what, where, and how of place-specific
clinical practices, but also sets these local experiences against a
theoretical backdrop that links them to the power of modern
medicine in shaping fundamental life experiences. Contributors:
Christine Ceci, U of Alberta; Lisa Diedrich, Stony Brook U; Suzanne
Fraser, Monash U; John Liesch, Simon Fraser U; Jenna Loyd, CUNY;
Annemarie Mol, U of Amsterdam; Mary Ellen Purkis, U of Victoria.
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