Wages for Caring: Compensating Family Care of the Elderly

Wages for Caring: Compensating Family Care of the Elderly

Wages for Caring: Compensating Family Care of the Elderly

Wages for Caring: Compensating Family Care of the Elderly

Hardcover

$65.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Wages for Caring examines policies and programs of compensation for family caregivers of the disabled elderly from a broad analytical perspective, weighing current policies of home care services against principles of access, equity, quality, and funding of long-term care. Linsk, Keigher, Simon-Rusinowitz, and England challenge widely held assumptions that currently hold the family responsible for care, and accept the government's role in deterring or delaying institutionalization. The authors focus on programs and policies that already exist which could be adjusted to include families and to promote support of family caregiving. In assessing the potential of broad implementation of wages for caring, they contend that if implemented appropriately, family compensation may offer benefits not available through any other kind of service system.

First, the authors review incentives to family care and services to families providing home care, and include an overview of attendance allowance and caregiver compensation programs in other developed countries. Next, they present several original studies in an integrated format to allow for the analysis of pros and cons of several compensated family care programs. Third, they examine provisions of Medicaid programs at the state level, as well as provisions of the aging network and their potential to complement family care. The focus is largely on poor clients and families, for whom the burden of care has the most relevant costs in terms of potential government liability. Finally, the authors develop consumer centered criteria to evaluate policy and program provisions, with special attention to the special needs of low-income elderly and their families. Wages for Caring will prove particularly useful to public policymakers, social workers, gerontologists, and researchers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275936358
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/30/1992
Pages: 296
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.69(d)
Lexile: 1400L (what's this?)

About the Author

NATHAN L. LINSK is Associate Professor and Interim Head of Medical Social Work at the University of Illinois in the College of Allied Health Professions. Dr. Linsk has practiced clinical social work in long-term care fields for 20 years, and is currently Director of the Midwest AIDS Training and Education Center. He has published two books and many articles on the subject of long-term care.

SHARON M. KEIGHER is Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Michigan. A social worker for 20 years, Dr. Keigher has published a book and several articles detailing her varied research on Medicaid policy, homelessness, and housing risks of the elderly.

LORI SIMON-RUSINOWITZ is an Adjunct Professor of Medical Social Work at the University of Illinois in the College of Allied Health Professions, where she has been affiliated for five years.

SUZANNE E. ENGLAND is an Interim Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, College of Associated Health Programs at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is also Associate Professor there and at the Jane Addams School of Social Work at the same university, and serves as Director of the Project for the Study of Families, Health, and Social Policy.

Table of Contents

Preface
Compensated Family Care for the Elderly in the United States and Other Nations
Care of the Elderly: Shared Responsibilities
Policy Contexts and Dimensions for Compensated Family Care
Family Compensation for Care of the Elderly in Other Nations: Options, Lessons and Evolving Concerns
State Policies Regarding Compensated Family Caregiving in the United States
Policy at Work in Two Statewide Community Care Programs
Policy Divergence in Michigan and Illinois: Home and Community-Based Care Models
Agency Services in Support of Family Caregiving in the Illinois Community Care Program
Compensating Kin for Care: Provider Agency Views of Policies, Agency Operations, and Impact on Caregivers and Consumers
Perspectives of Illinois Policymakers and Program Administrators
Michigan Administrators View Compensated Family Care: The Adult Home Help Program
Consumer Responses to Compensated Family Care
Impacts and Impliations of Wages for Caring
Stakesholders' Perceptions in Compensating Family Care: Whose Life Is It Anyway?
Toward a More Just and Responsive Policy
Bibliography
Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews