| Literature DB >> 34965796 |
Anna C Meyer1, Glenn Sandström2,3, Karin Modig1.
Abstract
AIMS: All Swedish municipalities are legally obliged to provide publicly funded elder care to individuals in need. The Swedish Social Service Register collects data on such care. It is the only nationwide source of information on care home residency and use of home care but has rarely been used for research. This study aims to present the content and coverage of the Social Service Register and to provide guidance for researchers planning to use these data.Entities:
Keywords: Health registers; Sweden; administrative registers; ageing; coverage; elder care; home care; population; register data
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34965796 PMCID: PMC9578086 DOI: 10.1177/14034948211061016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Public Health ISSN: 1403-4948 Impact factor: 3.199
Variables included in the SSR.
| Variable name in the SSR | Definition | Distribution among records in the SSR[ |
|---|---|---|
| Living arrangement | Permanently living in private residence, elder care home, or other living arrangement | Private residence: 75.6% |
| Home care | Granted and executed home care claim in place on the last day of the month. May include individuals living in elder care homes | Yes: 69.5% |
| Monthly home care hours | Number of granted home care hours per month. Up to 744 hours representing care around-the-clock | Available for 94.5% of records with home care |
| Short-term residence | Temporary placement in medical or care facility for round-the-clock care (e.g. for temporary hospitalisation, rehabilitation, or relief of private caregivers) | Yes: 2.7% |
| Daytime activities | Social daytime activities for older individuals living in their own home that is publicly funded according to the Social Service Act (e.g. meetings to talk, play board games or go for a walk with others) | Yes: 3.1% |
| Other support | Support within elder care not included elsewhere, e.g. providing necessary transportation | Yes: 0.8% |
| Types of care included in home care claim | Distribution among records in the SSR[ | |
| Service | Help with household chores (‘practical help’), e.g. cleaning, meal preparation, grocery shopping or running errands | Yes: 62.5% |
| Personal care | Support with all other tasks necessary to meet individuals’ social, physical and psychological needs, e.g. personal hygiene, getting dressed, eating or facilitating social contacts | Yes: 63.2% |
| Social participation | Support aimed at reducing social isolation and enabling participation in social activities outside the home | Yes: 7.4% |
| Relief of private caregiver | Temporary provision of care to relieve private caregivers such as spouses | Yes: 1.2% |
| Meal service | Indicates whether practical help recorded in variable | Practical help provides only meal service: 2.3% |
| Security alarm | Indicating whether personal care recorded in variable | Personal care includes only alarm: 7.0% |
| Care provided based on separate claim (among individuals without home care or independently of the main home care claim) | Distribution among records in the SSR[ | |
| Meal service | Delivery of prepared meals (‘meals on wheels’) | Yes: 7.6% |
| Security alarm | Installation of alarm system to notify medical services in emergency situations | Yes: 46.2% |
| Social participation | Support aimed at reducing social isolation and enabling participation in social activities outside the home | Yes: 3.0% |
| Relief of private caregiver | Temporary provision of care and support to relieve private caregivers such as spouses | Yes: 1.2% |
Additional information collected in the SSR: personal number, municipality, month and year, specific support for individuals with mental disabilities in their own home (applicable to 0.4% of records).
NA: not available (missing); SSR: Social Service Register.
All monthly records in the SSR during January 2013 to December 2020 among individuals aged 70 years and older in the Ageing and Health Cohort. As data are available on a monthly basis, one record in the SSR pertains to one person during one month. Individuals receiving care for longer time periods therefore appear as several records in the SSR.
Figure 1Reporting to the SSR and the proportion of 80–89-year-old residents receiving home care and living in care homes by municipality during 2013 to 2020. Proportion receiving home care restricted to individuals living in their own home. SSR: Social Service Register.
Figure 2.Mean number of granted home care hours by municipality among individuals aged 80–89 years, January 2013 to December 2020; 744 hours indicate around-the-clock home care. (a) All 290 municipalities in Sweden. (b) All municipalities excluding those that reported mean numbers below 5 or above 200 hours for at least one month (N=237). (c) Additionally excluding municipalities with less than 100 home care recipients in at least one month (N=144). List of municipalities included in (b) and (c) provided in Supplemental File 1. Municipalities with missing data in some months are shown with gaps. SSR: Social Service Register.
Figure 3.Proportion of 80–89-year-old individuals in the SSR receiving (a) practical help or (b) personal care. Histograms include monthly observations (n=19,872) from 207 municipalities. List of included municipalities provided in Supplemental File 1. Months during which municipalities reported did not report to the SSR are not shown. SSR: Social Service Register.
Figure 4.Proportion and overlap of records in the SSR receiving the same type of care as part of home care claim and according to a separate claim. Calculated for all monthly records in the SSR during January 2013 to December 2020 among individuals aged 70 years and older in the Ageing and Health Cohort. SSR: Social Service Register.