Abstract

Japan, a society facing demographic aging at an incomparable speed, decided to introduce a new public long-term care insurance system to meet the expected need for elders to be cared for in the near future. The purpose of this study was to examine the change in knowledgeability on the side of managers of Japanese geriatric hospitals regarding (1) the concept of care-management as the methodology to supply care services to the elderly smoothly, and (2) comprehensive assessment for the elders as the technical skill in the process of materializing care management. Subjects were interviewed and questioned over the telephone according to a structural questionnaire. Managers (directors and office managers) of geriatric hospitals in 1996 and 1999. In 1996, the rate of knowledgeability for care management on the side of managers of geriatric hospitals was 70.0% (28/40) as a whole, increasing to 97.3% (71/73) in 1999. With regard to MDS-RAPs, the knowledgeability rate increased from 57.5% (23/40) in 1996 to 95.9% (70/73) in 1999. However, regarding care planning, almost all of the hospitals that performed care planning were those in the category required to submit care plans to the municipal government. Geriatric hospitals that were not required to submit such plans did not perform such planning either in 1996 or in 1999. It can be concluded that the decision to introduce a long-term care insurance system in Japan has led to a deeper understanding of the methodology of care management and a comprehensive assessment on the side of managers of geriatric hospitals.

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