Required courses

International policy in aging and long-term care

Instructor

Dr Mei-Ju Chi

Credits

2

Course Description

Aging around the world poses a global challenge in eldercare. These include the weakening of informal family care systems for the elderly, growing need for formal long-term care of the frail and disabled who can no longer be adequately supported by family members, and mounting pressures for policy responses to tackle these societal challenges. It is argued that policymakers should take a proactive stance. That is, when family care for the elderly falls short and family caregivers are increasingly under strain, the government should step in and step up support to fill in the gap by developing appropriate policies and a continuum of long-term care services that are accessible and affordable for the majority of older people in need. Three general principles are then suggested with regard to long-term care provision, financing, and quality assurance, which transcend national borders and can be used to guide long-term care policy-making.

Topics

  • International Aging Issues: A Global Perspective
  • Healthy Ageing Action Policy
  • Economic Challenges and Coping Strategies of Aging Society
  • Function and Physiological Health of the Aged and Disabled
  • Employment and Mental Health of the Aged and Disabled Social Participation and Quality of Life of the Aged and Disabled
  • Status and Development of Environmental Friendly Policies for the Aged and Disabled
  • Guidelines for developing long-term care strategies: an international consensus
  • Assessment of Long-Term Care Needs and International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
  • The integrated care model of long-term care: taking PACE in the United States as an example
  • The construction and development of long-term care system: the experience of Germany and Japan
  • Comparing long-term care policies in Denmark, Norway, and the Netherlands
  • Compare long-term care policies in Australia, New Zealand, and Canada
  • Quality monitoring of long-term care services: British and Swedish experiences
© 2024 Copyright - International Ph.D. Program in Gerontology and Long-Term Care
- made by bouncin