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E-raamat: Ageing, Care Need and Quality of Life: The Perspective of Care Givers and People in Need of Care

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Steadily increasing life expectancy is one of the great achievements of industrialised societies over the last century. Life expectancy has not only been growing among the young and those reaching retirement age, but also, especially in recent decades, among people ages 80 and above. These improvements in life expectancy have led to the emergence of the so-called third age, when people retire, but are still you- ful, healthy and able to participate in society. Nevertheless, closer to the end of life, a fourth age of decrepitude and dependence on others has to be anticipated. - spite the postponement of functional limitations and severe disabilities into higher ages, the debate continues over whether the additional years gained are healthy years, or years with severe care need, particularly among the oldest old, the fastest growing segment of the population. Future improvements in life expectancy and the health status of the elderly will determine the need for care in the future. While different assumptions about these trends based on expert opinion or the extrapolation of past experiences can be made, there will always be a degree of uncertainty about future trends. A third - portant factor driving the extent of future care need is, however, already determined by the history of the past century and is embedded in the age structures of our populations.

Muu info

The Perspective of Care Givers and People in Need of Care
Preface 7(7)
Part I Projections of Care Need and Care Resources
People in Need of Long-term Care: The Present and the Future
14(15)
Heiko Pfaff
Care Need Projections for Germany until 2050
29(13)
Eckart Bomsdorf
Bernhard Babel
Jens Kahlenberg
Care Need Projections by Marital Status and Childlessness for Germany 2000-2030 based on the FELICIE Project
42(19)
Gabriele Doblhammer
Uta Ziegler
Projection of Care Need and Family Resources in Germany
61(21)
Erika Schulz
Cohort Trends in Disability and Future Care Need in Germany
82(12)
Rainer Unger
Projections of the Number of People with Dementia in Germany 2002 Through 2047
94(20)
Uta Ziegler
Gabriele Doblhammer
Part II Health Factors and Care Determinants
The Effect of Sex, Obesity and Smoking on Health Transitions: A Statistical Meta-analysis
114(29)
Gabriele Doblhammer
Rasmus Hoffmann
Elena Muth
Wilma Nusselder
Demand for Long-term Residential Care and Acute Health Care by Older People in the Context of the Ageing Population of Finland
143(20)
Mike Murphy
Pekka Martikainen
Old Age, the Need of Long-term Care and Healthy Life Expectancy
163(14)
Elke Hoffmann
Juliane Nachtmann
Trends in Individual Trajectories of Health Limitations: A Study based on the German Socio-Economic Panel for the Periods 1984 to 1987 and 1995 to 1998
177(27)
Gabriele Doblhammer
Uta Ziegler
Part III Care Givers
Perceived Care Giver Burden of Spouses and Children in Flanders: Who's Feeling more Burdened and Why?
204(18)
Benedicte De Koker
Voluntary Care Giving in the Life Course of Women in Eastern and Western Germany
222(19)
Tatjana Mika
Michael Stegmann
The Authors 241
Prof. Dr. Gabriele Doblhammer is Professor for Empirical Social Science and Demography at the University of Rostock and Director of the Rostock Center for the Study of Demographic Change.

Dr. Rembrandt Scholz is Research Scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock.