Mitigating the impact of the 'silos' between the disability and aged-care sectors in Australia: Development of a Best Practice Framework
Loading...
Date
Authors
Hussain, Rafat
Parmenter, Trevor
Wark, Stuart
Janicki, Matthew
Knox, Marie
Hayhoe, Nicola
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Abstract
Background
Although a ‘person-centred focus’ is a legislated objective for both aged-care and disability services sectors in Australia, evidence suggests limited translation into systems and practices due to entrenched silos. This paper proposes a Best Practice Framework to mitigate these silos.
Methods
Mixed-methods research comprising key informant interviews with major stakeholders across both sectors; a survey of people with/without intellectual disability aged 60+ years; qualitative in-depth interviews; and survey of health professionals.
Results
There is an urgent need to develop inter-sectoral ‘integrated care systems’. Key components include choice in accommodation; regular assessment of health and well-being indicators; development and adoption of nationally consistent policies/standards across integrated aged- and disability-care sectors; improved strategies for workforce planning; and upskilling of existing staff including place-based collaboration.
Conclusions
An integrated service model requires collaboration on broader public policy instruments, appropriate planning and resourcing. A strategic shift is required to ensure better quality person-centred support systems.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description