Hardback
Care Homes in a Turbulent Era
Do They Have A Future?
9781803925813 Edward Elgar Publishing
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This thoughtful book provides a refreshing, comparative perspective on the future of care homes in our post-pandemic world. Building on more than a decade of collaborative international and interdisciplinary research in Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US, it employs a feminist political economy framework to address the key challenges facing care homes in this turbulent era.
This thoughtful book provides a refreshing, comparative perspective on the future of care homes in our post-pandemic world. Building on more than a decade of collaborative international and interdisciplinary research in Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US, it employs a feminist political economy framework to address the key challenges facing care homes in this turbulent era.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
This thoughtful book provides a refreshing, comparative perspective on the future of care homes in our post-pandemic world. Building on more than a decade of collaborative international and interdisciplinary research in Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US, it employs a feminist political economy framework to address the key challenges facing care homes in this turbulent era.
With particular attention to lessons learned in Canada, Sweden, and Norway, the contributing authors argue that publicly-funded care homes remain critical to care arrangements but require policy and practice transformations to produce equitable and supportive conditions. Attentive to the specific contexts and tensions that shape care, chapters address key questions about care home quality and labour in relation to gender, race, ethnicity, religion and class. The book analyses the physical and social boundaries that set the conditions for quality of life and care, moving beyond the minimum to explain how nursing homes can provide joy.
Offering alternative approaches to the complex challenges facing this vital public service, this book will be a key reference for students and scholars of health policy, comparative social policy and social work. Its integration of statistical, policy and practice analysis with ethnographic research will prove invaluable to those concerned with long-term care policy and practice.
With particular attention to lessons learned in Canada, Sweden, and Norway, the contributing authors argue that publicly-funded care homes remain critical to care arrangements but require policy and practice transformations to produce equitable and supportive conditions. Attentive to the specific contexts and tensions that shape care, chapters address key questions about care home quality and labour in relation to gender, race, ethnicity, religion and class. The book analyses the physical and social boundaries that set the conditions for quality of life and care, moving beyond the minimum to explain how nursing homes can provide joy.
Offering alternative approaches to the complex challenges facing this vital public service, this book will be a key reference for students and scholars of health policy, comparative social policy and social work. Its integration of statistical, policy and practice analysis with ethnographic research will prove invaluable to those concerned with long-term care policy and practice.
Critical Acclaim
‘This book is an essential resource for researchers, practitioners and policy makers involved in the nursing home sector. By advocating for systemic changes, inclusive practices and supportive environments, Care Homes in a Turbulent Era: Do They Have a Future? offers a valuable vision for the future of care homes.’
– Charlotte Van Campfort, Ageing and Society
‘Unmissable for all who plan, study or experience later life care. Based on meticulous research, the book offers crucial insights into life in care homes for residents, families and workers – and many ideas for improvement. Never flinching from big questions – home ownership, residents’ rights, communication challenges – its scope includes exciting new thinking about diversity, difference, accountability and joy.’
– Sue Yeandle, University of Sheffield, UK
‘Care homes are not entities of the past, but of the future. Based on extensive research from Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US, this excellent book shows what it takes to allow people who live or work in care homes not just to survive but to thrive.’
– Teppo Kröger, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
– Charlotte Van Campfort, Ageing and Society
‘Unmissable for all who plan, study or experience later life care. Based on meticulous research, the book offers crucial insights into life in care homes for residents, families and workers – and many ideas for improvement. Never flinching from big questions – home ownership, residents’ rights, communication challenges – its scope includes exciting new thinking about diversity, difference, accountability and joy.’
– Sue Yeandle, University of Sheffield, UK
‘Care homes are not entities of the past, but of the future. Based on extensive research from Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US, this excellent book shows what it takes to allow people who live or work in care homes not just to survive but to thrive.’
– Teppo Kröger, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Contributors
Contributors: Gudmund Ågotnes, Hugh Armstrong, Pat Armstrong, Albert Banerjee, Susan Braedley, Jacqueline Choiniere, Charlene Harrington, Frode F. Jacobsen, Janna Klostermann, Monique Lanoix, Ruth Lowndes, Prince Owusu, Palle Storm, James Struthers, Marta Szebehely, Petra Ulmanen
Contents
Contents:
1 Care homes in crisis: promising ways forward 1
Pat Armstrong and Susan Braedley
2 Piercing the corporate veil: nursing home ownership in
turbulent times 19
Hugh Armstrong
3 What’s critical to care? 34
Pat Armstrong, Jacqueline Choiniere, Charlene
Harrington, and Marta Szebehely
4 The crisis in the nursing home labour force: where is the
political will? 50
Pat Armstrong, Frode F. Jacobsen, Monique Lanoix, and
Marta Szebehely
5 Negotiating internal and external boundaries of nursing
homes during Covid-19: a case study from Norway 67
Gudmund Ågotnes and Frode F. Jacobsen
6 Are safer, welcoming care homes possible? Considering
physical environments 82
Susan Braedley and Pat Armstrong
7 Family members and nursing home care: lessons from
Ontario and Sweden during Covid-19 99
Ruth Lowndes, Jacqueline Choiniere, and Petra Ulmanen
8 Equity and diversity in nursing home care: lessons from
Canada and Sweden 117
Prince Owusu, Susan Braedley, and Palle Storm
9 Regulation and accountability in the care home sector:
expert commentaries 137
Albert Banerjee, Hugh Armstrong, Pat Armstrong, Frode
F. Jacobsen, Charlene Harrington, and James Struthers
10 Making joy possible in care home policies and practices 151
Susan Braedley, Pat Armstrong, and Janna Klostermann
Index 169
1 Care homes in crisis: promising ways forward 1
Pat Armstrong and Susan Braedley
2 Piercing the corporate veil: nursing home ownership in
turbulent times 19
Hugh Armstrong
3 What’s critical to care? 34
Pat Armstrong, Jacqueline Choiniere, Charlene
Harrington, and Marta Szebehely
4 The crisis in the nursing home labour force: where is the
political will? 50
Pat Armstrong, Frode F. Jacobsen, Monique Lanoix, and
Marta Szebehely
5 Negotiating internal and external boundaries of nursing
homes during Covid-19: a case study from Norway 67
Gudmund Ågotnes and Frode F. Jacobsen
6 Are safer, welcoming care homes possible? Considering
physical environments 82
Susan Braedley and Pat Armstrong
7 Family members and nursing home care: lessons from
Ontario and Sweden during Covid-19 99
Ruth Lowndes, Jacqueline Choiniere, and Petra Ulmanen
8 Equity and diversity in nursing home care: lessons from
Canada and Sweden 117
Prince Owusu, Susan Braedley, and Palle Storm
9 Regulation and accountability in the care home sector:
expert commentaries 137
Albert Banerjee, Hugh Armstrong, Pat Armstrong, Frode
F. Jacobsen, Charlene Harrington, and James Struthers
10 Making joy possible in care home policies and practices 151
Susan Braedley, Pat Armstrong, and Janna Klostermann
Index 169