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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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But does it work? The role of regulation in improving the quality of residential care for older people in Europe | Author(s) | Ciara O'Dwyer |
Journal title | Quality in Ageing and Older Adults, vol 16, no 2, 2015 |
Publisher | Emerald, 2015 |
Pages | pp 118-128 |
Source | www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/qaoa.htm |
Keywords | Care homes ; Nursing homes ; Management [care] ; Quality of life ; Standards of provision ; Comparison ; Europe. |
Annotation | Regulation is the tool preferred by policy-makers to manage the quality of residential care for older people. However, it remains unclear which form of regulation is most effective. The residential care sector for older people in Europe offers a unique opportunity to explore this issue, since countries vary in how they control quality in the sector. This paper discusses this issue; it uses a comparative approach, collating secondary data from various sources and conducting qualitative comparative analysis on the data. Three regulatory approaches were in operation - many Northern European countries operate on a self-regulatory basis, and are associated with the highest quality. Many continental countries, the UK and Ireland operate a command-and-control regulatory approach, with a moderate standard of care. Mediterranean and Eastern European countries have limited regulation, with care of a lower standard. However, the type of regulation appears to be a product of the prevailing culture and philosophy of care within each country. Thus, quality outcomes are a measure of financial investment in care. Consistent calls for command-and-control style regulation may be misguided, as high-quality care requires high-public investment and a professional workforce with the freedom to focus on quality improvement mechanisms. The paper provides a framework for analysing outcomes associated with different types of regulation. While a self-regulatory model is linked with the best outcomes, financial investment and the philosophy of care may be more important factors influencing the quality of care. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-170519223 A |
Classmark | KW: LHB: QA: F:59: 583: 48: 74 |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
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...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
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