Far from being predetermined, the course ageing takes is subject to a variety of influences throughout one's life. This is something that policymakers have so far failed to appreciate, argues Alan Walker. He makes the case for a new strategy which focuses on the whole life course, with the intention of preventing many of the chronic conditions associated with later life
Millions of Americans rely on safety-net programs such as the Temporary Assistance for Needy Familie...
Two years after the government consulted on the next steps for a Carers Strategy, the Department of ...
The privatisation of adult social care is a 30-year process that has grown unchecked, made worse by ...
For complex anthropological, social, professional and legal reasons, many Western countries spend ap...
Kate Summers argues that while scholars often engage in descriptively identifying social security pr...
Solving the crisis in social care provision for older people is not just a matter of building more c...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
The Extending Working Lives (EWL) agenda seeks to sustain employment up to and beyond traditional re...
Sanna Read, Raphael Wittenberg, and Nicholas Mays summarise research carried out by a team from the ...
Despite being in decline, the quality of mental health services is largely absent from public debate...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
A frequent concern of older people and of those who work with older people is that research is often...
On 20 March, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Jeremy Hunt finally made a speech identi...
The aim of this paper is to address how care arrangements shape the conditions of older people livin...
The burden of COVID restrictions fell unequally across the population, and some of those most affect...
Millions of Americans rely on safety-net programs such as the Temporary Assistance for Needy Familie...
Two years after the government consulted on the next steps for a Carers Strategy, the Department of ...
The privatisation of adult social care is a 30-year process that has grown unchecked, made worse by ...
For complex anthropological, social, professional and legal reasons, many Western countries spend ap...
Kate Summers argues that while scholars often engage in descriptively identifying social security pr...
Solving the crisis in social care provision for older people is not just a matter of building more c...
Populations in developed societies are rapidly aging: fertility rates are at all-time lows while lif...
The Extending Working Lives (EWL) agenda seeks to sustain employment up to and beyond traditional re...
Sanna Read, Raphael Wittenberg, and Nicholas Mays summarise research carried out by a team from the ...
Despite being in decline, the quality of mental health services is largely absent from public debate...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
A frequent concern of older people and of those who work with older people is that research is often...
On 20 March, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Jeremy Hunt finally made a speech identi...
The aim of this paper is to address how care arrangements shape the conditions of older people livin...
The burden of COVID restrictions fell unequally across the population, and some of those most affect...
Millions of Americans rely on safety-net programs such as the Temporary Assistance for Needy Familie...
Two years after the government consulted on the next steps for a Carers Strategy, the Department of ...
The privatisation of adult social care is a 30-year process that has grown unchecked, made worse by ...