Autonomy and Acceptance of Long-Term Care |
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Authors: | Hui-Chuan Hsu Yu-Shan Ting Ting-Wen Jiang Ming-Chih Chien Chih-Hsin Chien |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Health Care Administration , Asia University , Taiwan, Republic of China gingerhsu@seed.net.tw;3. Department of Health Care Administration , Asia University , Taiwan, Republic of China |
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Abstract: | This study explored the relationship between four types of autonomy (health autonomy, informational autonomy, living autonomy, and financial autonomy) and the acceptance of five types of long-term care (adult day care, respite care, assisted living, unit care, and group home) for the elderly in Taiwan. Data were collected from 167 middle-aged and older people. The acceptance of five types of long-term care ranged from 75.9–84.9%. Financial autonomy and information autonomy were significantly related to acceptance of all five types of long-term care. Living autonomy is related to assisted living and group homes. Policy implications are discussed. |
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