| Literature DB >> 26346568 |
Stephanie Carretero1, James Stewart2, Clara Centeno1.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore the benefits of information and communication technologies (ICT)-based services for informal carers and paid assistants of older people living in the community. We cross-case analysed the effects of twelve initiatives in the EU, the USA and Canada, based on their individual analysis documented through interviews with promoters and a literature review. We carried out the cross-case analysis following a variables-oriented strategy on seven dimensions of impact at micro-, meso- and macro-levels: the quality of life of informal carers and paid assistants, quality of life of care recipients, quality of care, care efficiency and sustainability, acceptability, and infrastructure and accessibility. ICT-based services for informal carers and paid assistants improve the quality of life of older people and their carers and access to qualified care. They also generate savings which contribute to the sustainability of the care systems. These findings constitute a first look at the benefits of the use of ICT-based services for informal carers and paid assistants. Nevertheless, more research using experimental methods is needed to demonstrate the impact of these ICT-based services at meso- and macro-levels. This would help to support policy-makers to deploy these technologies for long-term care delivery.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Efficiency; Long-term care; Quality of care; Quality of life; Social investment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26346568 PMCID: PMC4555199 DOI: 10.1007/s10433-015-0333-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Ageing ISSN: 1613-9372
Dimensions and examples of indicators at micro-, meso- and macro-levels of the impact-assessment methodology of ICT-based initiatives
| Dimensions | Indicators | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micro | Meso | Macro | ||
| Quality of Life of Informal Carer | Reconciliation between care and work (possibility to keep the job while caring, to enter into the job market and to improve the work condition) | Possibility to balance well care & work activities | Efficiency at work | Number of carers that balance care & work activities |
| Social life (aspects related to carers’ social relationships and participation, and their interactions with significant others) | Positive social contacts & relationships | Reduction in family conflicts | Increased social cohesion & inclusion | |
| Other dimensions of quality of life (health.) | Psychophysical health & life satisfaction | Number of non-stressed carers | ||
| Quality of life of paid assistant (health of the carer, its prerequisites and effects, as well as the social life and work-related aspects). | Psychophysical health and independence level | Number of non-stressed carers | ||
| Quality of life of care recipient (health of the care recipient, its prerequisites and effects, as well as their social relationships) | Physical level; Psychological level; Independence level | Number of reported cases of abuse/neglect by family members | Target number of dependent older people supported | |
| Quality of care (necessary prerequisites and the outcomes of the care provided by carers) | Improvement of caring activities by direct (e.g. training) or indirect (e.g. decreasing burden of carer) factors | |||
| Care efficiency & sustainability (economic sustainability of the initiative and the efficiency in terms of costs and quality of the final outcome) | Care efficiency (in terms of quality and cost containment) and sustainability for care recipients and families | Efficiency and Sustainability for care providers | Efficiency and Sustainability for Social Protection and Care systems | |
| Acceptability (aspects making the initiative attractive towards the main actors at all levels) | Acceptability by Carer and care recipient | Marketability of ICT devices (from ICT device producer point of view) | Resources of Care system to support ICT devices (e.g. public investments in ICT) | |
| Infrastructure & accessibility (the impact of infrastructure facilities on the access and use of ICT-based services) | Accessibility of initiative by carers | Availability of services (from care provider point of view) | Availability of services (from system point of view) | |
Overview of the sample of the 12 selected ICT-based initiatives
| Name | Start year | Country | Articles/docs | Service description | Typology of technological service | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ID | I & L | PS & SI | CC | |||||
| Action | 1998 | Sweden | 20 | Older spouse carers can use Web-based training support, video phone links to a social care call centre, to communicate with network of families and practitioners | X | X | X | |
| Campus | 2004 | Italy | 3 | Set of online and DVD-based training material for informal carers to improve caring skills and life chances for families, carers and migrant care assistants | X | X | ||
| Caring for others | 2000 | Canada | 10 | 10 weekly group training sessions via internet video to high burden housebound carers, with follow-up video support group, and online information | X | X | ||
| Cuidadoras en red | 2008 | Spain | 2 | Training courses on ICT-based skills to improve access to information and social support, primarily for family carers and care assistants. Online community | X | X | ||
| E-care | 2005 | Italy | 9 | Care planning and coordination with multiple agencies, families and volunteers; provides call centres, telealarms, telehealth, video conferencing, online information, telefriending | X | X | X | X |
| Ippi + Amigo | 2004 | Sweden | 5 | TV-based communication system for older people to communicate with care services and family with call centre for relatives to update and coordinate care | X | X | X | X |
| Emergency alarm | 1994 | Hungary | 2 | Social alarm over GSM, with call centre staffed primarily by volunteers, facilitating home care | X | |||
| Just checking | 2003 | UK | 6 | Electronic Monitoring of movements of early-stage dementia sufferers living at home helps professionals and family better understand care needs, building trust, and facilitating independent living and home care | X | X | ||
| Platform for caring family members | 2006 | Austria | 2 | Information web site and hot line in two languages about caring, services etc. | X | |||
| Reach I/II | 1995, 2001 | USA | 4 | Integrated service supported by nurses, online, video and telephone including therapy, advice, a bulletin board and training which aims to reduce the burden and depression in family carers, to support carers of dementia sufferers | X | X | ||
| Sophia | 2005 | Germany | 2 | Multiple types of social alarm, and a call centre to support identification of older people’s needs, and provide phone-based social support to older people and carers from volunteers | X | |||
| Telecare scotland | 2006–2011 | UK | 11 | Social alarm and home care sensors to help local care services and family members care for older people in the community | X | X | X | |
Articles/docs: number of articles/documents reviewed. ID ICT for independent living. I & L ICT for information and learning. PS & SI ICT for personal support and social integration. CC ICT for care coordination
Impacts at micro-, meso- and macro-levels and per ICT-enabled services
| Impact analysis (micro-level) | Impact analysis (meso-macro-level) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Services | Impacts for informal carers | Impacts for older people | Social Services | Health Care |
| Independent living | (−) hours of care (−) eliminates the need for constant presence (+) peace of mind (−) anxiety (+) health-related quality of life (+) reconciliation of care and work and family | (+) independent living and delay dependency (+) health status (+) perception of safety (+) compliance in treatment (+) improved relation carer–older person | (−) number of care visits (−) overnight care stays Delays institutional care | (−) hospital admissions |
| Information & learning | (+) accessibility to training (+) finding and receiving appropriate information (+) caring skills and digital competence (+) employability (+) sense of security | (+) Quality of care | Delays institutional care (−) number of care visits (−) overnight care stays (+) quality and effectiveness of formal care | (−) hospital admissions (−) length of hospital stays |
| Personal support & social integration | (+) promotes development of informal social networks of carers (−) isolation (−) stress (+) Quality of life (+) reconciliation of care and work | (+) Quality of care (+) Quality of life (+) Improved relation carer–older person | ||
| Care coordination | (−) stress (+) Quality of life (−) burden of care (+) reconciliation of care and work (+) builds trust with professionals | (+) Quality of care (+) Quality of life (+) health status | (−) number of care visits Delays institutional care | |
| Savings of 79 m GBP (over 5 years), for 20 m GBP investment | ||||
(−) means a decrease in the value of the variable, (+) means increase in the value of the variable. For example, (−) stress in the column of informal carers and paid assistants means that they informed of a decrease in stress due to the use of the ICT-based service. (+) quality in the column of older people means that they informed of a higher level of quality of life due to the use of the ICT-based service