Long-term care restructuring in rural Ontario: retrieving community service user and provider narratives

This paper examines the extensive restructuring of community-based long-term care that was initiated in Ontario, Canada in 1996, and does so with particular reference to longstanding problems of provision in rural communities. Specifically, it draws on a case study focussed on two small rural towns...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2000-04, Vol.50 (7-8), p.1037-1045
Hauptverfasser: CLOUTIER-FISHER, D, JOSEPH, A. E
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JOSEPH, A. E
description This paper examines the extensive restructuring of community-based long-term care that was initiated in Ontario, Canada in 1996, and does so with particular reference to longstanding problems of provision in rural communities. Specifically, it draws on a case study focussed on two small rural towns to develop a 'situated understanding' of service-user and service-provider perspectives on service coordination issues and on service cuts, particularly as they affect the ability of elderly people reliant on publicly-funded community services to stay in their homes, to continue to 'age in place'. The general and specific antecedents of long-term care reform are considered prior to the presentation of the case study. General antecedents include the rapid aging of Canada's population and aggressive strategies to reduce government deficits, while specific antecedents flow from a decade of failed attempts to address longstanding issues of service coordination and from the ideologically-driven, free market stance of the provincial government elected in 1995. The analysis of interviews conducted with 14 community-service users and 17 providers suggests that the managed competition system introduced as the centerpiece of long-term care reform has resulted in increasing diversity and uncertainty on both sides of the service provision equation. Despite continued attempts by rural elderly people and their families to 'cut and paste' support packages, it seems that the restructuring of publicly-funded community services, combined with a substantial re-investment in long-term care facilities, will make some elderly people more vulnerable to institutionalization.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00353-6
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The analysis of interviews conducted with 14 community-service users and 17 providers suggests that the managed competition system introduced as the centerpiece of long-term care reform has resulted in increasing diversity and uncertainty on both sides of the service provision equation. Despite continued attempts by rural elderly people and their families to 'cut and paste' support packages, it seems that the restructuring of publicly-funded community services, combined with a substantial re-investment in long-term care facilities, will make some elderly people more vulnerable to institutionalization.</abstract><cop>Oxford</cop><pub>Elsevier</pub><pmid>10714925</pmid><doi>10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00353-6</doi><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; RePEc; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Biological and medical sciences
Canada
Community Health Services - economics
Community service
Community Services
Costs and Cost Analysis
Delivery Systems
Elderly
Elderly people
Female
General aspects
Health Care Reform
Health Care Services Policy
Health systems. Social services
Humans
Institutionalization
Long Term Care
Long term community care
Long term health care
Long-Term Care - economics
Long-term care reform Community services Aging in place Rural Ontario
Male
Managed Care Services
Medical sciences
Old age
Ontario
Public Health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Reforms
Rural Areas
Rural communities
Rural Health Services - economics
title Long-term care restructuring in rural Ontario: retrieving community service user and provider narratives
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