For every person over the age of 65 in today's European Union, there are
four people of working age; by 2050, there will only be two. Demand for
long-term care, of which home care forms a significant part, will
inevitably increase in the decades to come. Despite the importance of
the issue, however, up-to-date and comparative information on home care
in Europe is lacking. This book attempts to fill some of that gap by
examining current European policy on home care services and
strategies.
Home Care Across Europe probes a wide range of topics including the
links between social services and health-care systems, the prevailing
funding mechanisms, how service providers are paid, the impact of
governmental regulation, and the complex roles played by informal
caregivers. Drawing on a set of Europe-wide case studies (available in a
second, online volume), the study provides comparable descriptive
information on many aspects of the organization, financing and provision
of home care across the continent. It is a text that will help frame the
coming debate about how best to serve elderly citizens as European
populations age.