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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Older UK sheltered housing tenants' perspectives of well-being ad their usage of hospital services | Author(s) | Glenda Cook, Cathy Bailey, Philip Hodgson |
Journal title | Health and Social Care in the Community, vol 25, no 5, September 2017 |
Publisher | Wiley, September 2017 |
Pages | pp 1644-1654 |
Source | http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/hsc |
Keywords | Sheltered housing ; Tenants ; Well being ; Hospital services ; Usage [services] ; Needs [elderly] ; Evaluation. |
Annotation | Sheltered housing in the UK is a form of service-integrated housing for people, predominantly aged 60+. This study aimed to examine sheltered housing tenants' views of health and well-being, the strategies they adopted to support their well-being, and their use of health and social care services through a Health Needs Assessment. The study used a parallel, three-strand mixed method approach to encompass the tenants' perceptions of health and well-being (n = 96 participants), analysis of the service's health and well-being database, and analysis of emergency and elective hospital admissions (n = 978 tenant data sets for the period January to December 2012). Tenants' perceptions of well-being were seen to reinforce much of the previous work on the subject with strategies required to sustain social, community, physical, economic, environmental, leisure, emotional and spiritual dimensions. Of the tenants' self-reported chronic conditions, arthritis, heart conditions and breathing problems were identified as their most common health concerns. Hospital admission data indicated that 43% of the tenant population was admitted to hospital (886 admissions), with 53% emergency and 47% elective admissions. The potential cost of emergency as opposed to elective admissions was substantial. The mean length of stay for emergency admissions was 8.2 days (median 3.0 days), while elective hospital admission had a mean length of stay of 1.0 day (median 0.0 days). These results suggest the need for multi-professional health, social care and housing services interventions to facilitate sheltered housing tenants' aspirations, and to support their strategies to live well and independently in their own homes. Equally, there is a need to increase tenants' awareness of health conditions and their management, the importance of services which offer facilitation, resources and support, and the key role played by prevention and reablement. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-170922220 A |
Classmark | KLA: KET: D:F:5HH: LD: QLD: IK: 4C |
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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