Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
The expression “Long-Term Care” (LTC) is still today an expression that has no straightforward
translation into Portuguese apart from the strict language translation – Cuidados de Longa Duração.
Traditionally LTC in Portugal has developed from social assistance and therefore the concept in use
more commonly is “social care”. But even this, that would translate as ‘Cuidados sociais’, is used
mostly in the scientific literature. In legal and policy documents the term in use is ‘Respostas Sociais’,
that translates as Social Responses. In 2006, it was created a new system, the National Network of
Integrated Continuous Care (RNCCI – Rede Nacional de Cuidados Continuados Integrados),
bringing together the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, to
create a new type of service under the National Health System (SNS – Serviço Nacional de Saúde)
that would focus on securing continuous, long-duration and focused on rehabilitation and reablement
care, as well as on palliative care.
Care is primarily understood as the other side of the coin against needs. The two notions end up
being rather circular as they imply each other. In that sense, understandings of care are tied to how
the system is organised in terms of programmes and services that provide care.
Despite the references to the term quality to discuss care services, interviewed stakeholders struggle
with offering a clearly outlined definition of what quality of care means. Even if probed to be more
explicit about the meaning of quality of care, it was not possible to get such a definition. Explanations
remain fuzzy and at a very abstract level.
In Portugal, the data and regulatory infrastructures related to LTC provisions reflect the system
fragmentation that separates social care from the RNCCI. Regarding the most pressing problems in
provision of care, views collected in interviews and the literature offer a high level of consensus
around some main ideas: low coverage rates and long waiting lists signal a need for fast expansion
of the system; underfunding of the care system is preventing good quality of care; shortages of
workers and of qualifications have a strong impact in quantity and quality of care.
The system draws on a one-size-fits-all approach, with national regulations applying to the entire
country in the same manner. This includes issues of funding, types of services and regulations on
licensing and operations.
The ongoing political debate is vague, mostly reacting to the occasional news in the media but
showing no signals of any systematic holistic discussion taking place soon about LTC. Negotiations
between the state and care providers is almost exclusively focused on funding issues.
Idioma:
Inglês
Tipo (Avaliação Docente):
Científica
Notas:
Indexed in OpenAIRE.
Action full title: Learning from long-Term Care practices for the European Care Strategy.
Acronym: LeTs-Care
Nº de páginas:
42