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E-grāmata: Old People's Homes and the Production of Welfare

(The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK),
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In 1980 old people comprised over half the clients of Local Authority Social Services Departments and accounted for about half of their resources, yet until then residential care of the aged had been a backwater of both research and practice. During the 1970s a large research literature had developed on the subject, particularly in the United States. However, studies had been partial in their focus on issues, making no attempt to draw together their arguments to create a model that described and evaluated competing theories about what it is that determines the quality of residential life. Originally published in 1981, Bleddyn Davies and Martin Knapp filled that gap in this book.

The authors discuss not only the theoretical arguments about residential care and the degree to which those theories had been verified by research, but also how far the factors considered to be important had been successfully measured, considering the choices to be made between alternative varieties of care that had grown up so rapidly in the previous five years. The authors conclude with an analysis of how their approach should contribute to the discussion of issues that was to be faced by British policy-makers in the 1980s as our welfare systems attempted to cope with the increasing numbers of the very old.



In 1980 old people comprised over half the clients of Local Authority Social Services Departments and accounted for about half of their resources, yet until then residential care of the aged had been a backwater of both research and practice. First published in 1981, the authors filled that gap in this book.

Preface. Part One: Introduction
1. The Production of Welfare Part Two:
Outputs
2. The Psychological Well-Being of Residents
3. Other Outputs Part
Three: Inputs and the Production Process
4. Resource Inputs: Labour and
Capital
5. Social Environment
6. Personal Characteristics and Experiences
Part Four: Conclusion
7. Concluding Discussion. Appendix A: The Life
Satisfaction Rating Scale of Neugarten, Havighurst and Tobin. Appendix B: The
Use of Bradburns Affect Balance Scale with the Elderly in Residential Care.
Notes. Bibliography. Index.
Bleddyn Davies and Martin Knapp