An Assessment of Information & Assistance Services For Seniors Needing Long-term Care in North Carolina: What has changed and what comes next for the Aging Network?
dc.contributor.advisor | James, Sherman A | |
dc.contributor.author | Hayes, Ariel | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2011-04-22T20:45:18Z | |
dc.date.available | 2011-04-22T20:45:18Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2011-04-22 | |
dc.department | The Sanford School of Public Policy | |
dc.description.abstract | Policy Question: How should North Carolina’s Aging Network provide information and assistance services so that all older adults (and their caregivers) looking for long-term care receive appropriate guidance? Introduction: Information and Assistance (I&A) programs inform, counsel and connect people seeking long-term care with services that could meet their needs. The Older Americans Act mandated that every Area Agency on Aging (of which there are 17 in North Carolina) establish I&A programs in their region. North Carolina has 42 I&A programs registered with the Division of Aging and Adult Services; more counties offer these services without OAA funds. As the population ages, more people will need a well-informed, local agency is critical to help them navigate the long-term care system and access services. Older adults and their families face such a complicated array of choices and decisions – about not only health care, but also housing, finances, and basic household tasks. Ten years ago, the North Carolina Institute of Medicine (NCIOM) delivered its report, “A Long-Term Care Plan for North Carolina: Final Report” to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Early in its deliberations, the Task Force concluded “one of its goals would be to propose a system that would allow consumers to find their way into and through the system with ease.” Once the state was awarded a Real Choice Systems Grant, these recommendations became a roadmap for North Carolina, which launched two initiatives to improve seniors’ access to long-term care information and counseling: a web-based resource system called NCcareLink and the regional Community Resources Connections (CRC) program. My assessment focuses on how the Aging Network and its existing I&A programs have responded to these initiatives and worked to create a more accessible and understandable system. This report is especially relevant to counties that are beginning the transformation to a CRC and to state policymakers responsible for NCcareLink. s Methodology:
Key Findings:
Recommendations
Objective #1: Reduce the time it takes for older adults to find the services they need
Objective #2: Make it easier for older adults to identify if they need information or assistance
Objective #3: Provide high-quality assistance services
Objective #4: Engage the private, for-profit sector to reduce the strain on the public and non-profit Aging Network
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dc.identifier.uri | ||
dc.language.iso | en_US | |
dc.subject | Aging | |
dc.subject | health information | |
dc.subject | North Carolina, Health | |
dc.title | An Assessment of Information & Assistance Services For Seniors Needing Long-term Care in North Carolina: What has changed and what comes next for the Aging Network? | |
dc.type | Master's project |
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