Published Work

Through a glass darkly : community care and elderly people

Público Deposited
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.isbn
  • 1870607317
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.creator
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.place_of_publication
  • London
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.publisher
  • King's Fund Institute
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.date_published
  • 1992
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.issue_number
  • 14
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.pagination
  • 47
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.series
  • King's Fund Institute research report
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.abstract
  • The care of elderly people is a matter of both increasing urgency and major uncertainty. Community care policies have come under increasing scrutiny over the past decade, and three factors have been particularly influential: an awareness of an ageing population, allied with other demographic and social changes that are likely to reduce the supply of carers; a general criticism over the reality of community care; the emergence of a managerialist critique of inefficiency in the organisation and control of publicly funded community care. These issues, along with the prospects of community based care, are explored in this paper.
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.note
  • Pagination: 47p.
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.subject
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.resource_type
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.rights_statement
Translation missing: pt-BR.dog_biscuits.fields.biblionumber
License

Relações

Itens