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Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Published

Standard

Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation. / Harding, Andrew; Hemingway, Ann; Parker, Jonathan et al.
2017. British Society of Gerontology, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Harvard

Harding, A, Hemingway, A, Parker, J & Hean, S 2017, 'Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation', British Society of Gerontology, Swansea, United Kingdom, 5/07/17 - 7/07/17.

APA

Harding, A., Hemingway, A., Parker, J., & Hean, S. (2017). Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation. British Society of Gerontology, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Harding A, Hemingway A, Parker J, Hean S. Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation. 2017. British Society of Gerontology, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Author

Harding, Andrew ; Hemingway, Ann ; Parker, Jonathan et al. / Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing : A Realist Evaluation. British Society of Gerontology, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{67b8a1e4334f4a45a339d0b26d1a3f16,
title = "Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing: A Realist Evaluation",
abstract = "The home environment is often a key determinant of independence, wider health and wellbeing in later life. On account of the challenges associated with ageing, it is common for older people to reassess their home. One common option is specialist housing. While terminology varies, most specialist housing can be categorised as either sheltered (housing with support) or extra care (housing with care). In the context of increased marketisation of wider welfare provision, through the Care Act 2014 UK governments have obligated local authorities to provide information and advice (I&A) on welfare (including housing). Funding has also been made available to key third sector I&A providers. With resources an important consideration in the third sector, there is evidence that telephone services are more financially efficient when compared to face to face support. Although little is known around efficacy, telephone services have an assumed importance. This presentation discusses the current state of the specialist housing market in the UK and reports on a realist evaluation of a key third sector telephone housing options service. The problematic conceptualisation of the welfare consumer (Harding et al. 2014, 2016) is compounded by critical supply-side issues that are present in both social and private specialist housing sectors. On this basis, the wider context within which older people are assumed to be active agents can be described as complex, unresponsive and lacking transparency. But how, why, for whom and in what circumstances does a telephone housing options service (dis)empower older people to navigate through this maze?",
author = "Andrew Harding and Ann Hemingway and Jonathan Parker and Sarah Hean",
year = "2017",
month = jul,
day = "5",
language = "English",
note = "British Society of Gerontology : Do Not Go Gentle ; Conference date: 05-07-2017 Through 07-07-2017",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Telephone housing options service for older people considering specialist housing

T2 - British Society of Gerontology

AU - Harding, Andrew

AU - Hemingway, Ann

AU - Parker, Jonathan

AU - Hean, Sarah

PY - 2017/7/5

Y1 - 2017/7/5

N2 - The home environment is often a key determinant of independence, wider health and wellbeing in later life. On account of the challenges associated with ageing, it is common for older people to reassess their home. One common option is specialist housing. While terminology varies, most specialist housing can be categorised as either sheltered (housing with support) or extra care (housing with care). In the context of increased marketisation of wider welfare provision, through the Care Act 2014 UK governments have obligated local authorities to provide information and advice (I&A) on welfare (including housing). Funding has also been made available to key third sector I&A providers. With resources an important consideration in the third sector, there is evidence that telephone services are more financially efficient when compared to face to face support. Although little is known around efficacy, telephone services have an assumed importance. This presentation discusses the current state of the specialist housing market in the UK and reports on a realist evaluation of a key third sector telephone housing options service. The problematic conceptualisation of the welfare consumer (Harding et al. 2014, 2016) is compounded by critical supply-side issues that are present in both social and private specialist housing sectors. On this basis, the wider context within which older people are assumed to be active agents can be described as complex, unresponsive and lacking transparency. But how, why, for whom and in what circumstances does a telephone housing options service (dis)empower older people to navigate through this maze?

AB - The home environment is often a key determinant of independence, wider health and wellbeing in later life. On account of the challenges associated with ageing, it is common for older people to reassess their home. One common option is specialist housing. While terminology varies, most specialist housing can be categorised as either sheltered (housing with support) or extra care (housing with care). In the context of increased marketisation of wider welfare provision, through the Care Act 2014 UK governments have obligated local authorities to provide information and advice (I&A) on welfare (including housing). Funding has also been made available to key third sector I&A providers. With resources an important consideration in the third sector, there is evidence that telephone services are more financially efficient when compared to face to face support. Although little is known around efficacy, telephone services have an assumed importance. This presentation discusses the current state of the specialist housing market in the UK and reports on a realist evaluation of a key third sector telephone housing options service. The problematic conceptualisation of the welfare consumer (Harding et al. 2014, 2016) is compounded by critical supply-side issues that are present in both social and private specialist housing sectors. On this basis, the wider context within which older people are assumed to be active agents can be described as complex, unresponsive and lacking transparency. But how, why, for whom and in what circumstances does a telephone housing options service (dis)empower older people to navigate through this maze?

M3 - Speech

Y2 - 5 July 2017 through 7 July 2017

ER -