scholarly journals Political and Cultural Foundations of Long-term Care Reform Comment on "Financing Long-term Care: Lessons From Japan"

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 83-86
Author(s):  
Ming-Jui Yeh

This paper comments on Naoki Ikegami’s editorial entitled "Financing long-term care: lessons from Japan." Adding to the editorial, this paper focuses on analyzing the political and cultural foundations of long-term care (LTC) reform. Intergenerational solidarity and inclusive, prudential public deliberation are needed for the establishment or reform of LTC systems. Among various lines of ethical reasoning related to LTC, Confucian ethics and other familist ethics are specifically important in the societies that share these values. The core issue in the debates around LTC reform is how to (re-)define the scope of social entitlements and accordingly to allocate the responsibility for care between states and families, between social groups, and between generations with limited resources.

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 160-160
Author(s):  
Rebecca Davis ◽  
Cheryl Monturo ◽  
Maria O'Reilly ◽  
Diana Sturdevant

Abstract The pandemic profoundly affected the care of older adults in long term care communities (LTCC) across the world. More than one third of pandemic deaths were linked to nursing homes. Most nations and states had strict guidelines on visitation, with many, especially in the United States, totally prohibiting visitation for over an entire year. Well-intentioned measures to protect through isolation caused a profound ethical tension between safety and self-determination. The aim of the project was to examine this dilemma using a case study and the Madison Collaborative Ethical Reasoning in Action Framework. Eight key questions of fairness, outcomes, rights, responsibilities, character, liberty, empathy, and authority were applied in the context of federal and state mandates in the US and Australia. Results highlighted issues of ageism, paternalism vs empathy, regulatory vs family authority, a focus on short-term outcomes while forfeiting long-term outcomes, community responsibilities to the resident trumped individual resident rights, the potential loss of community character in lieu of basic care provision, a loss of personal freedoms, and the emphasis of physical well-being over holistic well-being. The results of this analysis can inform future policy and provide lessons learned for the future.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 160-161
Author(s):  
Michael Lepore ◽  
Nancy Kusmaul ◽  
Sarah Holmes ◽  
Deanna Myer ◽  
Zahra Rahmaty ◽  
...  

Abstract Frontier communities are rural counties that are sparsely populated with limited resources to provide residential long-term care; COVID-19 has heightened these barriers and adversely affected residents, their families and staff. This study describes the feasibility of implementing recommended WE-THRIVE measures in one residential long-term care setting in a frontier community in the rural Midwest, and the capacity for administrative leadership to draw upon results of measures to implement person-centered care post-pandemic. During the COVID-19 pandemic, early efforts to advance person-centered care in the setting were displaced by a focus on infection control and containment. WE-THRIVE measures assess person-centered care following immunization distribution, and are discussed in terms of how to develop a dashboard to ‘de-escalate’ a COVID-19 focus and rebuild momentum towards person-centered care. Particular attention is given to the context of measurement, including data sharing and measurement burden, to inform advancing person-centered long-term care in other frontier communities.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1334-1351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming-Jui Yeh

AbstractThis paper reviews the past development of the publicly funded long-term care (LTC) system and aims to advance further discussion of LTC in Taiwan. The Ten-year Long-Term Care Plan 2.0 introduced in 2017 calls for a major reform of a publicly funded LTC system in Taiwan. The reform expands on the previous universal tax-based LTC system, allowing for more comprehensive and accessible subsidies on LTC services. This paper provides a brief overview of the political context of the reform and an introduction to the legal basis, financing and delivery mechanisms of the reform plan. To this end, as a preliminary evaluation, this paper identifies major institutional and socio-cultural tensions that could challenge the implementation of the plan. Institutional tensions include the dominant foreign worker caring model, which relies on approximately 220,000 foreign workers to provide LTC services, and the discontinuity between health and social care governance, which leads to a discontinuity between curative and LTC care. Socio-cultural tensions focus on conflicting values in the allocation of responsibility of care and in the understanding of disability between universal social citizenship in the modern state and traditional Confucian ethics. Policy implications of these tensions for the LTC system are then discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (5) ◽  
pp. 692-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Fraser ◽  
Martine Lagacé ◽  
Bienvenu Bongué ◽  
Ndatté Ndeye ◽  
Jessica Guyot ◽  
...  

Abstract The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic. Over 20 international researchers in the field of ageing have contributed to this document. This commentary discusses how older people are misrepresented and undervalued in the current public discourse surrounding the pandemic. It points to issues in documenting the deaths of older adults, the lack of preparation for such a crisis in long-term care homes, how some ‘protective’ policies can be considered patronising and how the initial perception of the public was that the virus was really an older adult problem. This commentary also calls attention to important intergenerational solidarity that has occurred during this crisis to ensure support and social-inclusion of older adults, even at a distance. Our hope is that with this commentary we can contribute to the discourse on older adults during this pandemic and diminish the ageist attitudes that have circulated.


2004 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 649-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
MISA IZUHARA

Using qualitative interviews with 54 older people, this article explores the changing patterns of the ‘generational contract’ in contemporary Britain and Japan. In particular, this article presents a cross-national comparison concerning the exchange of housing assets and long-term care between older parents and their adult children in the context of different laws, cultures, social policy and housing markets. The concepts of intergenerational solidarity, reciprocity and ambivalence were used to aid the analysis of the household data. The research found there were significant cross-national differences in areas such as autonomy and decision-making process regarding bequests, and choice of beneficiaries. In both societies, however, no strong link was found between bequest motives and family support for long-term care. The model of intergenerational solidarity (willingness to help children) thus appeared to override the reciprocal dimension of the ‘generational contract’.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sinwan Basharat ◽  
Karen Born

Low-value tests, treatments, and procedures are an important health care quality problem in Canada and across the world because they provide little clinical benefit, may be harmful for patients, and waste limited resources. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems face increased challenges of limited resources, reduced capacity, and a growing backlog of surgeries and other procedures. The pandemic has compelled health care professionals to make challenging decisions to prioritize health care services while coping with increased demand. As Canada emerges from the pandemic and health care systems rebuild and begin to address the backlog of delayed or cancelled services, there is an imperative to introduce lasting changes to reduce low-value care and ensure high-quality care is available to everyone. To help inform efforts for using health care resources wisely and to support decision-making, CADTH and Choosing Wisely Canada convened a 10-member multi-disciplinary panel of clinicians, patient representatives, and health policy experts to review areas of low-value care that can be reduced or limited. This panel reviewed, deliberated, and prioritized 19 recommendations of the more than 400 Choosing Wisely Canada recommendations, the implementation of which can help ensure high-value care after the pandemic. Examples of the 19 recommendations include: Avoiding unnecessary transfers for patients in long-term care to hospitals unless there is an urgent medical need. Limiting blood tests and imaging unless required to answer a specific clinical question or guide treatment. Not transfusing red blood cells for hemodynamically stable patients in the intensive care unit. Not delaying palliative care for patients with serious illness because they are pursuing disease-directed treatment. Moreover, the panel’s discussion highlighted how the selected recommendations can advance key priorities, including improving health equity and access to care, appropriately using limited resources, emphasizing patient-focused care, and addressing challenges the pandemic has presented for long-term care.


2011 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-21
Author(s):  
Sara Joffe

In order to best meet the needs of older residents in long-term care settings, clinicians often develop programs designed to streamline and improve care. However, many individuals are reluctant to embrace change. This article will discuss strategies that the speech-language pathologist (SLP) can use to assess and address the source of resistance to new programs and thereby facilitate optimal outcomes.


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