Abstract
AbstractThis chapter introduces the concept of care poverty and suggests it as a key approach for research and policy-making on care for older people. The concept combines and connects three different strands of research literature: gerontological studies that focus on functional limitations and unmet needs, feminist social policy scholarship that has introduced concepts like care regimes and care deficit, and research on poverty and social inequality. The chapter describes how the concept of care poverty is also inspired by Raiz’s term of health care poverty. Care poverty is defined as the deprivation of adequate coverage of care needs resulting from interplay between individual and societal factors. It is further described as a situation where people in need of care do not receive sufficient assistance from either informal or formal sources. The mission of the concept of care poverty is to help identify inequalities in access to adequate care and to contribute to the creation of policies that can eradicate these inequalities.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference91 articles.
1. Alber, J. (1995). A framework for the comparative study of social services. Journal of European Social Policy, 5(2), 131–149. https://doi.org/10.1177/095892879500500204
2. Alkire, S., Foster, J., Seth, S., Santos, M. E., Roche, J. M., & Ballon, P. (2015). Multidimensional poverty measurement and analysis. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199689491.001.0001
3. Allen, S., & Mor, V. (1997). The prevalence and consequences of unmet need: Contrasts between older and younger adults with disability. Medical Care, 35(11), 1132–1148. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199711000-00005
4. Anttonen, A. (1990). The feminization of the Scandinavian welfare state. The welfare state in transition: From the social insurance state towards the social service state. In L. Simonen (Ed.), Finnish debates on women’s studies: Women’s worlds, realities and choices (pp. 3–49). University of Tampere.
5. Anttonen, A., & Sipilä, J. (1996). European social care services: Is it possible to identify models? Journal of European Social Policy, 6(2), 87–100. https://doi.org/10.1177/095892879600600201