Long-Term Care Of Older Adults In Malta: Influencing Factors And Their Social Impacts Amid The International Financial Crisis

Keywords

Financial crisis; long-term care; Malta; older adults; outsourcing; privatization; social impact

Abstract

ABSTRACT: This article explores recent changes in long-term care (LTC) for older persons in Malta, resulting from restructuring or other contextual factors related to the international financial crisis. The ageing population continues to grow, while traditional ways of providing care for the ageing population are progressively dwindling. Waiting lists for residential care have grown longer, although public-private partnerships have served to shorten these lists to some degree. Community care services are not keeping pace with need, and the frail elderly wishing to remain in their own homes often cannot do so without significant assistance from other sources. Service recipients fall into four groups: those affording private residential care; those granted a government-subsidized residential bed; those cared for at home by relatives; and those similarly cared for by nonfamily live-in caregivers with (or without) input from family members. Existent data are reviewed and analyzed along with a focus group of 30 stakeholders to explore this topic further. Future recommendations are made and consequences are explored as caregiving options move away from the responsibility of the traditional family system toward greater pressure on state-provided care, use of expensive private care, and waiting lists to secure services.

Publication Date

3-14-2016

Publication Title

Journal of Social Service Research

Volume

42

Issue

2

Number of Pages

263-279

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1080/01488376.2015.1129018

Socpus ID

84962621826 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84962621826

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