There is a growing population at the intersection of aging and disability who increasingly rely on old community service systems for care–systems that currently cannot handle the increase in demand and the crossing of the care boundaries that have been set up between the aging and those with disability.
In response to this need, Michelle Putnam has edited this volume to reflect the current research, facilitate collaboration across service networks, and encourage movement toward more effective service policies. Professional stakeholders evaluate the bridges and barriers to crossing network lines, and a chapter on current websites, agencies, and coalitions provides the much needed tools to bring collaboration into practice.
With contributions from those on the forefront of these issues, Aging and Disability will provide a basis for understanding why our aging and disability networks have so long been separated and what we can do to bridge that gap.
Зміст
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List of Figures
List of Tables
Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
Section One: Introduction to Cross-Network Collaborations and Coalitions
Moving from Separate to Crossing Aging and Disability Service Networks, Michelle Putnam
Facilitators and Barriers to Crossing Network Lines: A Missouri Case Study, Michelle Putnam, and Anneliese Stoever
Translating Knowledge to Next Steps: Professional Stakeholders’ Evaluations of Facilitators and Barriers to Crossing Network Lines, Michelle Putnam and Suzanne Pritzker
Professional Stakeholder Commentary on Missouri Case Study Findings, Kirsten Dunham
Section Two: Collaborations and Coalitions in Practice
Social, Economic, and Political Realities of Cross-Network Partnerships and Coalitions, Elias S. Cohen
Coalitions between Aging and Disability Interests: A Potential Vehicle to Promote Community Care for Older People, Rosalie A. Kane
Building Intersystem Partnerships at the Intersection of Aging and Developmental Disabilities, Edward Ansello
Partnerships and Coalitions across Aging and Disability Service Networks, Mike Oxford
Section Three: Research toward Improving Services at the Intersections of Aging and Disability
Stakeholder Involvement in Intervention, Research, and Evaluation, Laurie E. Powers
The Government-Wide Shift in Accountability for Results: Implications for Improving Research Outcomes in the Aging and Disability Nexus, Margaret L. Campbell
Translating Research into Program and Policy Changes, Fernando Torres-Gil
The Changing Intersections of Aging and Disability Partnerships, Michelle Putnam
Index’