The public funding of long-term care (LTC) programs to support the frail elderly is still underdeveloped compared to other areas of social protection for old age. In Europe, any moves to broaden entitlements to LTC are impeded by increasing demand for care coinciding with constrained public finances. We examine a set of conditions that facilitate modifications to the financial entitlement to LTC and elaborate the concept of ‘implicit partnerships’: an implicit (or ‘silent’) agreement, encompassing the financial co-participation of public funders and the time and/or financial resources of users and their families. We argue that the successful building of ‘implicit partnerships’ opens the door to potential reform of financial entitlements, ei...
The ageing of the European population brings new financial risks that call for state, market and soc...
Long-term care partnership (LTCP) programs were designed to both encourage middle-income individuals...
Ongoing reforms of European welfare states that aim at increasing ‘choice’ for patients, clients, an...
The public funding of long-term care (LTC) programs to support the frail elderly is still underdevel...
The design of public subsidies for long-term care (LTC) programmes to support frail, elderly individ...
Long-term care (LTC) is the largest insurable risk facing the elderly in most western societies. Par...
The risk of high costs of long-term care services and supports (LTSS) is one of the largest uninsure...
Abstract Long-term care (LTC) is the largest insurable risk facing the elderly in most western socie...
The issue of how best to finance long-term care (LTC) is the subject of recent reforms, forthcoming ...
The ageing of the countries’ populations, and in particular the growing number of the very old, is i...
Public policies that provide incentives for higher middle-income people to purchase private long-ter...
This article examines the universalization of long-term services and supports (LTSS) in three countr...
This article describes the social care funding and delivery arrangements of a varied selection of de...
Expected future demographic and societal shifts have put the improvement of quality and efficiency o...
peer reviewedWith the rapid increase in long-term care (LTC) needs, the negligible role of the marke...
The ageing of the European population brings new financial risks that call for state, market and soc...
Long-term care partnership (LTCP) programs were designed to both encourage middle-income individuals...
Ongoing reforms of European welfare states that aim at increasing ‘choice’ for patients, clients, an...
The public funding of long-term care (LTC) programs to support the frail elderly is still underdevel...
The design of public subsidies for long-term care (LTC) programmes to support frail, elderly individ...
Long-term care (LTC) is the largest insurable risk facing the elderly in most western societies. Par...
The risk of high costs of long-term care services and supports (LTSS) is one of the largest uninsure...
Abstract Long-term care (LTC) is the largest insurable risk facing the elderly in most western socie...
The issue of how best to finance long-term care (LTC) is the subject of recent reforms, forthcoming ...
The ageing of the countries’ populations, and in particular the growing number of the very old, is i...
Public policies that provide incentives for higher middle-income people to purchase private long-ter...
This article examines the universalization of long-term services and supports (LTSS) in three countr...
This article describes the social care funding and delivery arrangements of a varied selection of de...
Expected future demographic and societal shifts have put the improvement of quality and efficiency o...
peer reviewedWith the rapid increase in long-term care (LTC) needs, the negligible role of the marke...
The ageing of the European population brings new financial risks that call for state, market and soc...
Long-term care partnership (LTCP) programs were designed to both encourage middle-income individuals...
Ongoing reforms of European welfare states that aim at increasing ‘choice’ for patients, clients, an...