Abstract
Ageing in place has for many years been at the forefront of political goals for care provision for older people in Europe. The organization of care in terms of the national governing structure must therefore be continually observed to better understand the care actually offered and then used by older people. In this study, we examined the organization of social home care and institutional care across municipalities and administrative units in terms of what is offered to older people as formal care. Variation across municipalities and administrative units is observed with explorative cluster analysis and analysis of means of key dependent variables across clusters to better understand the variability in the care offered to older people in those municipalities and administrative units. The results show that while social home care is temporally available across several clusters of municipalities, and the affordability of social home care is also stable across clusters of municipalities, there are still municipalities where social home care has a limited time availability and municipalities where the out-of-pocket contribution to social home care delivery is nearly the twice the average of such contributions. In terms of institutional care, one can find administrative units with either a deficit or a surplus of placements of such care available.
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