Does Long-Term Care Literacy Matter in Evaluating Older Care Recipients’ Satisfaction with Care Managers? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Survey Data

Author:

Wang Ziyan1,Fukayama Kaori2,Niu Bing1

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Economics, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 599-8531, Japan

2. Graduate School of Nursing, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 553-8555, Japan

Abstract

In this study, we focused on the long-term care literacy of care recipients (older adults currently receiving formal care services) and examined its relationship with satisfaction with their care managers by using a unique individual dataset of Japanese people aged 65 years and older. To address the problem of non-respondent bias, we applied inverse probability weighting and the Heckman probit model for estimation. We found that the probability of older adults evaluating their satisfaction regarding the six aspects of care manager measurement increased with an increasing level of care literacy. However, concerning the level of satisfaction with their care managers, we only observed significant increases in the aspects of “Explanation power” and “Attitude and manners” as the level of care literacy increased. Covariates, such as age, gender, family structure, level of certification for long-term care, reasons for choosing the care manager, utilization of long-term care services, and the manner in which older respondents answered the survey questions, also mattered regarding the evaluation process of satisfaction of older adults. In Japan, utilizing formal care services based on the long-term care insurance system is complicated and sometimes difficult for older adults to understand. In this survey, 35% of older care recipients had inadequate care literacy. Improving the care literacy of older adults is important for better use of formal care services and increased satisfaction.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference42 articles.

1. A study on long-term care literacy;Saito;J. Chiba Univ. Com.,2017

2. National Federation of Health Insurance Societies (2023, January 26). National Consciousness Survey on Health Care and Health Insurance System. (In Japanese).

3. A survey on how older adults access medical and health information and what kinds of problems they face in accessing it;Kinjo;Jpn. J. Gerontol.,2017

4. Cabinet Office (2023, January 26). Survey on the Daily Life and Participation in Local Communities of Older People. (In Japanese).

5. Cabinet Office (2023, January 26). Annual Report on the Ageing. Society. (In Japanese).

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