S Tucker1, C Sutcliffe1, I Bowns1, D Challis1, K Saks2, H Verbeek3, E Cabrera4, S Karlsson5, H Leino-Kilpi6, G Meyer7,8, M E Soto9. 1. a Personal Social Services Research Unit , University of Manchester , Manchester , UK. 2. b Department of Internal Medicine , University of Tartu , Tartu , Estonia. 3. c Department of Health Services Research, CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care , Maastricht University , Maastricht , The Netherlands. 4. d School of Health Sciences, Tecno Campus , University Pompeu Fabra , Barcelona , Spain. 5. e Department of Health Sciences , Lund University , Lund , Sweden. 6. f Department of Nursing Science , University of Turku and Turku University Hospital , Turku , Finland. 7. g Faculty of Health, School of Nursing Science , University of Witten/Herdecke , Witten , Germany. 8. h Institute for Health and Nursing Science , Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg , Halle-Wittenberg , Germany. 9. i Geriatrics Department, Gerontôpole , Toulouse University Hospital , Toulouse , France.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To examine whether the mix of community and institutional long-term care (ILTC) for people with dementia (PwD) in Europe could be improved; assess the economic consequences of providing alternative services for particular groups of ILTC entrants and explore the transnational application of the 'Balance of Care' (BoC) approach. METHOD: A BoC study was undertaken in Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the UK as part of the RightTimePlaceCare project. Drawing on information about 2014 PwD on the margins of ILTC admission, this strategic planning framework identified people whose needs could be met in more than one setting, and compared the relative costs of the possible alternatives. RESULTS: The findings suggest a noteworthy minority of ILTC entrants could be more appropriately supported in the community if enhanced services were available. This would not necessarily require innovative services, but more standard care (including personal and day care), assuming quality was ensured. Potential cost savings were identified in all countries, but community care was not always cheaper than ILTC and the ability to release resources varied between nations. CONCLUSIONS: This is believed to be the first transnational application of the BoC approach, and demonstrates its potential to provide a consistent approach to planning across different health and social care systems. Better comparative information is needed on the number of ILTC entrants with dementia, unit costs and outcomes. Nevertheless, the findings offer important evidence on the appropriateness of current provision, and the opportunity to learn from different countries' experience.
OBJECTIVES: To examine whether the mix of community and institutional long-term care (ILTC) for people with dementia (PwD) in Europe could be improved; assess the economic consequences of providing alternative services for particular groups of ILTC entrants and explore the transnational application of the 'Balance of Care' (BoC) approach. METHOD: A BoC study was undertaken in Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the UK as part of the RightTimePlaceCare project. Drawing on information about 2014 PwD on the margins of ILTC admission, this strategic planning framework identified people whose needs could be met in more than one setting, and compared the relative costs of the possible alternatives. RESULTS: The findings suggest a noteworthy minority of ILTC entrants could be more appropriately supported in the community if enhanced services were available. This would not necessarily require innovative services, but more standard care (including personal and day care), assuming quality was ensured. Potential cost savings were identified in all countries, but community care was not always cheaper than ILTC and the ability to release resources varied between nations. CONCLUSIONS: This is believed to be the first transnational application of the BoC approach, and demonstrates its potential to provide a consistent approach to planning across different health and social care systems. Better comparative information is needed on the number of ILTC entrants with dementia, unit costs and outcomes. Nevertheless, the findings offer important evidence on the appropriateness of current provision, and the opportunity to learn from different countries' experience.
Entities:
Keywords:
balance of care; dementia; home care; institutionalisation; resource allocation
Authors: Anja Broda; Ansgar Wübker; Patrick Bremer; Gabriele Meyer; Anna Renom Guiteras; Dirk Sauerland; Astrid Stephan Journal: Z Gerontol Geriatr Date: 2019-02-15 Impact factor: 1.281