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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Frailty and social care over- or under-familiar terms? | Author(s) | Jill Manthorpe, Steve Iliffe, Jess Harris, Jo Moriarty, Martin Stevens |
Journal title | Social Policy and Society, vol 17, no 1, January 2018 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press, January 2018 |
Pages | pp 23-33 |
Source | https://doi.org/10.1017/S1474746416000427 |
Keywords | Physical capacity ; Ill health ; Chronic illness ; Dementia ; Cognitive impairment ; Endocrine diseases ; Social workers ; Interpretation ; England. |
Annotation | Definitions of frailty are much debated. The focus of this article is on the representation of frailty: who employs the terms 'frail' or 'frailty' in social care, about whom and with what meanings? The authors report secondary analysis of interview data from two waves of the Longitudinal Care Work study starting in 2008. Study participants were 240 social care managers or practitioners working in four English localities. Social care managers and practitioners did not talk at length about frailty as characterising the increasing needs of care users. The minority who talked about frailty used the term in three ways: describing a physical state not including dementia; describing a stable state, as distinct from those dying; and as a combination of physical and mental disabilities (i.e. dementia). Differences among the participants in this study about the meaning of frailty could have implications for policy makers and for communication with other staff, health professionals, older people and their relatives. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-180105202 A |
Classmark | BI: CH: CI: EA: E4: CP: QR: 4CC: 82 |
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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