
This important book describes a unique new procedure for evaluating how elderly persons living in nursing homes, residential care facilities, and senior apartments are affected by their environments. By reporting results from a comprehensive appraisal of group residential settings throughout the United States, the authors describe ways in which settings for older adults vary in their resident and staff characteristics, physical resources, policies and services, and social climates. They also show how resources are currently allocated to older people based on their social status and functional abilities, how facility size and ownership affect resource availability, and how setting characteristics may impact residents' lives. The book will be of particular interest to gerontological researchers and practitioners, community psychologists, and social service professionals who will find practical suggestions, based on empirical data, for improving existing residential settings and for planning new ones.
This book investigates how the physical, policy-driven, and social environments of group residences influence the well-being and daily experiences of older adults. Authors Rudolf H. Moos and Sonne Lemke utilize a comprehensive empirical framework to evaluate diverse residential settings, ranging from nursing homes to senior apartments. By analyzing data collected across the United States, the authors argue that facility characteristics—such as size, ownership, and resource allocation—directly correlate with the quality of life for residents. The text provides a systematic method for practitioners to assess and improve these environments based on resident needs and functional capabilities.
What You Will Find
Experts in gerontology and community psychology recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the environmental determinants of aging in place. Professionals frequently cite the book for its rigorous empirical methodology and its utility in informing policy and facility design.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
1994-05-05
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195062574
ISBN-13:
9780195062571
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