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Care Matters: Concepts, Practice and Research in Health and Social Care [Paperback / softback]

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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 205 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 320 g
  • Pub. Date: 04-Dec-1998
  • Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0761955666
  • ISBN-13: 9780761955665
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  • Price: 74,35 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 205 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 320 g
  • Pub. Date: 04-Dec-1998
  • Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0761955666
  • ISBN-13: 9780761955665
Other books in subject:
How can we make sense of the varying concepts of care and of the many forms care takes in practice? How can `good care be defined and evaluated?





This book draws upon a range of academic disciplines including sociology, social policy, psychology, history, geography, social work and nursing to address these questions. The authors consider whether shared meanings in the concept of care can still be found across differences of: family and paid care; health and social care; perspectives `carer and `cared for; and the experiences of different `client groups. Commonalities are identified in the form of concerns about personal empowerment, about choice and self-esteem and about the balance needed between independence, interdependence and dependency. What also emerges is the relevance of such issues for those giving as well as receiving care.

Reviews

The impact of [ the] opening chapters, all of which include the recipients perspective, is to raise awareness of issues to be discussed later in the book. The remaining chapters take a much more theoretical approach, but again raise improtant and current issues about the nature and context of caring. Each chapter provides a clear analysis of the debate from a particular theoretical perspective. Overall, I found the book interesting and challenging. [ I]t does address very relevant and important issues and leaves the reader with a broader understanding of the nature of care and current debates about how that care should be provided. [ T]he editors are able to draw out common issues and conceptualisations across a wide range of caring experiences and contexts - making the text relevant for all involved in care regardless of the context of client group. This is probably the books main strength.



By taking this approach the editors are able to relate theory and practice in a way that will have meaning for readers from different disciplines working in a variety of different caring contexts - Quality in Ageing - Policy, Practice and Research

Acknowledgements viii Contributors ix Poem: `Convalescence xii Introduction 1(1) Ann Brechin Care and humanity 1(3) Multiple perspectives 4(3) Exploring care 7(3) From perspectives to principles 10(1) References 11(2) Living in Residential Care 13(14) Dorothy Atkinson What is residential care? 14(3) Finding out about the quality of care 17(3) Experiencing the residential `climate 20(2) What is it like to live in a residential home? 22(2) Conclusion 24(1) Acknowledgements 25(1) References 25(2) Discovering the Present in Stories About the Past 27(15) John Adams Joanna Bornat Mary Prickett Reminiscence: the background 28(1) The project 29(2) Revisiting the transcripts 31(7) Conclusions 38(1) References 39(3) Terminal Care or Terminal Carelessness 42(12) Jeanne Katz The medicalisation of death 43(2) Palliative and terminal care 45(1) Who do hospices care for? 46(1) Philosophy and practice: new ways of thinking 47(4) Conclusion 51(1) References 52(2) Young Carers 54(12) Stan Tucker Penny Liddiard A different story? 54(1) Who cares? 55(2) Background to the research 57(1) The old new problem of identification 58(1) Key findings from the research 59(4) Public recognition of the needs of young carers 63(1) References 64(2) Care, Support, or Something Else? 66(15) Jill Reynolds Jan Walmsley Is it care thats needed? 67(2) What role for families? 69(4) Promoting control and autonomy 73(5) Conclusion 78(1) References 78(3) Normality and Disabling Care 81(15) John Swain Sally French In the name of care 81(2) Foundations of oppressive care 83(2) Measuring up to normality 85(2) To be or not to be normal 87(3) Human relations of oppressive care 90(2) To recognise and celebrate difference 92(1) The ideology of normality and disabling care 93(1) References 94(2) Treatment or Tender Loving Care 96(11) Moyra Sidell Treating chronic illness: the response of orthodox medicine 96(2) Living with a chronic illness: Elsie Durants experience 98(2) Competing paradigms: rethinking chronic illness 100(1) A holistic approach: a role for complementary therapies? 101(1) Competing frameworks of care 102(3) Conclusion 105(1) References 106(1) Caring in Place 107(19) Sheila M. Peace Domestic settings as care environments 109(5) Non-domestic settings as care environments 114(1) Changes in ownership, changes in environment? 115(5) Conclusions 120(2) Notes 122(1) References 122(4) Caregiving, Carework and Professional Care 126(13) Celia Davies Professional care -- nurses voices 127(3) Caregiving and carework 130(1) Gender, rationality and caring 131(4) Care in context 135(3) References 138(1) The Emergence of Care as a Policy 139(15) Julia Johnson Children and care 140(4) Adults requiring care 144(4) The emergence of `carers 148(2) Dependence and independence 150(1) Conclusions 151(1) References 152(2) Changing Health Care 154(16) Linda J. Jones The `welfare paradigm 155(1) The challenge to the `welfare paradigm 156(2) The shift to a `market paradigm 158(4) Evaluating `market principles 162(4) Conclusion -- beyond the market paradigm 166(2) References 168(2) What Makes for Good Care? 170(19) Ann Brechin Forms and functions of care 171(4) Defining and evaluating `good care 175(2) Care as a process and relationship 177(1) Dimensions of good and bad care: a simple model 178(4) Psychological factors and quality of care 182(2) Conclusion 184(1) References 185(4) Index 189