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Access to long-term care: perceptions and experiences of older Dutch people
- Authors:
- SCHIPPER Lisette, et al
- Journal article citation:
- Quality in Ageing and Older Adults, 16(2), 2015, pp.83-93.
- Publisher:
- Emerald
Purpose: Despite the current focus on demand-based care, little is known about what clients consider important when they have a request for formal long-term care services. The paper aims to discuss this issue. Design/methodology/approach: Questions about the access process to care services were added to the “Senior Barometer”, a Dutch web-based questionnaire that assesses the opinion of older people about different aspects in life. The questionnaire surveyed both people who already requested care services (“users”), and people that did not (“future clients”). Findings: The results show a significant difference in what people expect to be the first step from what users actually did, when requesting formal care services. In addition, there was a significant difference on how “users” and “future clients” rated several access service aspects. Research limitations/implications:The results give valuable information on how both “users” and “future clients” value the access process. The findings also provide valuable input for organisations providing long-term care for older clients about the important issues that have to be considered when organising the access process. Originality/value: This study shows what older people in the Netherlands find important during the access process to care and this has not been explored before. The difference between what “users” and “future clients” find of importance in the care access process suggests that it is difficult for people to foresee what will be important once the need for care arrives, or where they will turn to with a request for care services. (Edited publisher abstract)
Understanding obstacles to the recognition of and response to dementia in different European countries: a modified focus group approach using multinational, multi-disciplinary expert groups
- Authors:
- ILIFFE S., et al
- Journal article citation:
- Aging and Mental Health, 9(1), January 2005, pp.1-6.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
Experts from eight European countries (Belgium, France, The Netherlands, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom) and the disciplines of clinical psychology, general practice, geriatric medicine, old age psychiatry, medical sociology, nursing and voluntary body organisation met in 2003 to explore obstacles to recognition of and response to dementia in general practice within Europe. A modified focus group methodology was used in this exploratory process. Groups were conducted over a two-day period, with five sessions lasting 1-1.5 hours each. An adapted nominal group method was used to record themes arising from the group discussion, and these themes were used in a grounded theory approach to generate explanations for delayed recognition of and response to dementia. The overarching theme that arose from the focus groups was movement, which had three different expressions. These were: population movement and its consequences for localities, services and professional experience; the journey of the person with dementia along the disease process; and the referral pathway to access services and support. Change is the core issue in dementia care, with multiple pathways of change that need to be understood at clinical and organisational levels. Practitioners and people with dementia are engaged in managing emotional, social and physical risks, making explicit risk management a potentially important component of dementia care. The boundary between generalist and specialist services is a particular problem, with great potential for dysfunctionality. Stigma and ageism are variably distributed phenomena both within and between countries.
The identification of trends in the utilisation of mental health services by elderly: a Dutch case register study
- Authors:
- PIJL Ysbrand, SYTEMA Sjoerd
- Journal article citation:
- International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 18(5), May 2003, pp.373-380.
- Publisher:
- Wiley
In view of the rapid ageing of the population any changes in the use of mental health services by the elderly became increasingly important for policy development. This study aimed at the supply of information about trends in the numbers of elderly clients, the services they used and the volume and pattern of service utilisation. Details of elderly users and their use of community- and hospital-based services between 1990 and 1999 were retrieved from the Groningen case register. Developments in population size and age distribution in the register area were taken into account, as were the unit costs of mental health services. Large age specific changes were found that caused only the expenditures on the oldest elderly to increase due to a shift from outpatient clinics to prolonged psychogeriatric day treatment and inpatient care. Comparatively young elderly used fewer inpatient services and more community care. The number of new elderly clients declined progressively. In some age groups treated prevalence also decreased, but to a lesser extent, because of a prolonged use of mental health services. Study results seemed well in accordance with mental health policy as to deinstitutionalization and active ageing. Research on the effect of mental health care on life expectancy and the time lag between the intake of mental health providers and treated prevalence was proposed in order to improve the prediction of future service use by elderly.
The prognosis of depression in old age: outcome six to eight years after clinical treatment
- Authors:
- STEK M. L., et al
- Journal article citation:
- Aging and Mental Health, 6(3), August 2002, pp.282-285.
- Publisher:
- Taylor and Francis
Research suggests that the short-term outcome in severely depressed elderly in The Netherlands is worse compared to other studies in the Western world. The present study examines the long-term prognosis of hospitalized elderly patients with major depressive disorder and possible predictors of outcome. One hundred and five elderly inpatients with unipolar major depression, admitted by regional mental health services in a geographically delimited area, were evaluated six to eight years after index episode by trained residents using a structured diagnostic interview. The GP was interviewed using a standard questionnaire. At follow-up 40% of the original sample had died. Of the survivors 33% had fared well, 24% had a relapsing course, 22% had residual symptoms, 11% were continuously ill, and 9% had probable dementia. With respect to prognostic factors, personality disorder predicted a worse outcome. All patients with a major depressive disorder at follow-up received specialised care and used antidepressants. None of the patients received ECT. The mortality rate in clinically treated elderly with major depressive disorder is high.