词汇 | example_english_social-care |
释义 | Examples of social careThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. No socialcare practitioner had achieved this level of training. Recently there has been fresh impetus to bridge the health and socialcare divide. Relatives' experiences of the placement decisions are influenced by many factors, not least the actions and responses of health and socialcare practitioners. There is no evidence either to indicate that the needs of older people for health and socialcare are lower in rural areas. It should therefore be of particular interest to those working in health and socialcare settings. In this paper the costs of providing specialist and generic health and socialcare services were considered. Assessment approaches for older people receiving socialcare: content and coverage. There were clear gender differences, with men being particularly reluctant to engage with health and socialcare providers. There is far more literature available on health and socialcare than on consultation and involvement which is covered in their fourth chapter. The idea of the older person as a consumer of health and socialcare is challenged in the findings of this research. One option to be explored is the possibility of developing the method as a training tool for socialcare workers. It is seen as increasingly important that the socialcare you are offered should not be ' a lottery ' based on where you live. In order to model health and socialcare services we need to determine how these services interact. Should social workers be exclusively concerned with socialcare? Second, data about the use of health and socialcare services were obtained during the course of three face-toface interviews with the women. These costs included acute costs, socialcare costs, nonacute costs, and drug costs. Further research into the five clusters, perhaps incorporating other services such as socialcare or education, is needed before firmer conclusions can be drawn. It is highly likely that such tendencies to allocate free socialcare only where there is no 'obvious' informal carer will be gendered. A significant loss in hearing (denoted by the interviewer having to shout during the interview) was also significantly associated with higher socialcare costs. Only one of these, having dual responsibility for health and socialcare, was significantly associated with reduced hospitalization. Not all social policy areas are covered but there are chapters on income distribution, health inequalities, socialcare, gender and employment. Examples of commercial businesses contracting to government agencies and private individuals are found in socialcare and school meals provision. Such referrals would be to a broad range of health and socialcare agencies, for example, mental health, podiatry and physiotherapy. The relationships between demographic, pathological features and the costs of health and socialcare were explored using multivariate regression. There now appears to be substantial momentum in getting direct payments more established and not just as an alternative to conventional socialcare. The topics raised here mirrored the changes in primary/secondary/socialcare discussed above. Very few relatives perceived opportunities to discuss their feelings and explore alternatives to admission with health and socialcare staff. Older people are the biggest consumers of socialcare. The word 'flexibility' recurred constantly in the interviews on socialcare contracting. No socialcare staff wished to train to this level. With the exception of some new funding for local authorities to facilitate recruitment and retention in socialcare generally, this remains the case. Furthermore, the socialcare legislation of the regions delegates powers to manage these services to the municipal local authorities. Whereas older people living alone are more likely to receive socialcare support, they appear to be less likely to use health services. Older people living alone were more likely to receive socialcare support and appeared less likely to use health services. The sample sites therefore included contrasting joint working between the local health and socialcare agencies. The socialcare group responded least positively to being involved in research and being a source of data. Some care homes can provide both types of care, but the majority differentiate between residential (personal/ socialcare) and nursing care. Integrating health and socialcare assessment and care management alternative services are put in place, the district nurse continues to visit. This was combined with the economic objective of introducing local socialcare markets. Arguably it is in this final section that this edited collection makes its strongest contribution to the new literature on socialcare. However, the very nature of socialcare makes the promotion of choice a challenging aim. This is the means-tested, social welfare form of support that pays for socialcare, costs that are strictly medical being largely met by insurance. Carers and health and socialcare professionals identified a range of potential sources where they thought they might be able to purchase assistive devices. There are chapters on employment in old age, financial resources, health care, socialcare, housing policy, child-care provided by the older generation, and widowhood. Personal recommendation, especially from a health or socialcare professional was highly valued, and often determined the selection. The current policy debates are how to improve the integration of health and socialcare and how best to finance long-term care. Policy for public health and socialcare has also drawn on reviews of the relevant evidence, much of it from research funded by the department. In sum this publication has much to offer as a comparative account of socialcare services for children and older people in advanced industrial nations. The book has seven chapters and begins with an introduction on the importance of socialcare and the methodology of comparative research. They succeed in developing, and reaffirming, the importance of a distinctive analysis of social care welfare in a rapidly changing contemporary context. Contested territory and community services : interprofessional boundaries in health and socialcare. For the period of interest, the main responsibilities were: specialized healthcare (both somatic and psychiatric), socialcare, upper secondary schooling, transportation and cultural activities. Such is the transformation by stealth of modern socialcare. Providers of health and socialcare are seen as competing within a market for customers. Older people suffer discrimination and have to submit to a medical model of later life if they receive health or socialcare services. These features include adequate income, suitable housing, good advice and home care, not just those relating to health and socialcare services. The provision of socialcare is much more than a technical or objective exercise : it is a locus of politics. The reforms to community care have entailed the withdrawal of guaranteed state support for residents and the introduction of socialcare markets. Promoting older people's access to health and socialcare in these rural communities is a complex problem for formal health and socialcare services. Small beginnings are arguably more likely to succeed than grand plans in complex cultures in the new health and socialcare quasi-market economies. Financial aspects are likely to increase in importance as charging for community- and residential-based socialcare increases in scope and amount. Of course, the aim of nearly all medical, nursing or socialcare interventions is indirectly related to maintaining reserve or providing some compensatory support. The semi-structured interview elicited the participants' opinions about the accessibility of health and socialcare services with particular reference to the problems of farm families. Moreover, there may be instances in which the integration of health and socialcare services carry major threats. However, this preliminary study raises a question about interdisciplinary working in health and socialcare. Since the 1980s stricter priorities have been made regarding the use of resources in the health care and socialcare sectors. The difficulty comes in defining health care for elderly people and how to differentiate it from socialcare. Others, however, were uncertain about the ability of health and socialcare professionals to provide this information. The clinical practice of the specialty, which involves interprofessional- and interagency-working across the range of health and socialcare provides settings conducive for shared learning. It is recognized that older people often have complex multidimensional needs that span the spectrum of socialcare, primary care and secondary care. It is well recognized that poor co-ordination between health and socialcare services can have a devastating effect on vulnerable older people. The issues raised by this approach to practice and service development are located within discourses on leadership, modernization and change in health and socialcare. The issues raised by the approach to practice and service development are located within discourses on leadership, modernisation and change in health and socialcare. Integrating health and socialcare assessment and care management worker students. The perceptions of health and socialcare professionals and service users were collected via telephone and face-to-face semi-structured interviews (n 21). Integrating health and socialcare assessment and care management to be allocated a social worker. Increasing cognitive impairment mainly leads to increasing socialcare costs. Physical dependency significantly affects both health and socialcare costs. The greatest effect of physical limitation was on the receipt of socialcare. Other things being equal, depression appears to increase health care costs to a much greater degree than socialcare costs. People living alone also receive significantly higher levels of socialcare services, again probably in order to compensate for lower levels of informal support. For social workers and socialcare practitioners this implies a stronger and more effective contribution to national organisational policy and resource debates. In addition, the hospital discharge literature suggests that health and socialcare agencies may operate according to competing notions of good practice. I have argued elsewhere that the overall mission of health and socialcare services are being subsumed to drives for efficiency. It did not, fundamentally, fully explore the theoretical underpinnings informing evaluation in the health and socialcare field. In the particular case of socialcare, there is an internal dynamic linked to a cohort effect. The interview held at 18 weeks postpartum recorded total service utilization over the previous 18 weeks, including all health and socialcare services. All unit costs recorded followed recent guidelines on costing health and socialcare services as part of economic evaluation (20;21). It also assumes that medical and socialcare patterns are equivalent. This survey of police officers suggests that doctors and practitioners in health and socialcare are not sharing vital information. Therefore, services and socialcare for the poor and unemployed or the growing population of the aged need more and more local investment and stimulation. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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