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Supporting disabled parents: a family or a fragmented approach?
- Author:
- COMMISSION FOR SOCIAL CARE INSPECTION
- Publisher:
- Commission for Social Care Inspection
- Publication year:
- 2009
- Pagination:
- 55p.
- Place of publication:
- London
This CSCI report seeks to examine the experiences of disabled parents and their families and to see how far council policies, services and practice are providing appropriate support. The findings in this report are taken from a national survey of 50 councils; of the 70 interviews, 36 were conducted with representatives of adults’ services and 32 of children’s services, and two were conducted with a representative from each service jointly. To supplement the national picture, in-depth study workshops of services were conducted in four council areas. The report finds that many councils do not fully support disabled parents and their children.
Profile of disability in elderly people: estimates from a longitudinal population study
- Authors:
- MELZER David, et al
- Journal article citation:
- British Medical Journal, 24.4.99, 1999, pp.1108-1111.
- Publisher:
- British Medical Association
Reports on a study estimating the numbers of cognitively impaired and physically disabled elderly people in England and Wales, subdivided by a range of sociodemographic, dependency, care recipient, and survival variables. Results found that very elderly people and those with cognitive impairment make up a large population of those in need of long term care. A large proportion of disabled elderly still live outside institutions and depend on formal services as well as informal caregivers. The research also found that the disabled elderly also use acute hospitals extensively, underlining the interrelations between acute and long term care.
Reducing depression among older people receiving care: summary of intervention methods and findings
- Authors:
- LYNE K.J., et al
- Publisher:
- North Yorkshire and York Primary Care Trust
- Publication year:
- 2007
- Place of publication:
- York
Depression is very common among older people and often goes untreated. Common causes are loss of relationships through bereavement and loss of role. Another frequent cause of depression in older people is physical disabilities which prevent roles or activities which a person has especially valued. Difficulty in travelling outside one’s home is a common example. Others would be loss of valued activities like needlework, reading or writing through eyesight problems or arthritis. Depression is especially common within services for older people with many physical disabilities. Surveys have found around 25% of older home care customers to be depressed. Among another such group, older people who live in care homes, the proportion is around 40%. As life expectancy increases, more people suffer age-related physical disabilities. According to the 2006 White Paper, Our Health, Our Care, Our Say: “One of the greatest long-term challenges facing the health and social care system is to ensure that longer life means more years of health and well-being”. This concerns all services for older people – health services and social care, nursing and care homes, sheltered housing and home-based support services. How can they respond to depressed older people in their care? This intervention project explored whether depression could be reduced among older people, living in care homes and typically aged over 80, through guiding their regular care staff to assist life-improvements which particularly mattered to an individual.