Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
The Portuguese Long-Term Care (LTC) system is a dual system that splits into two branches. One
is the Social Care branch – Respostas Sociais (which would translate as “Social responses” but is
generally labelled in the literature as Social Care) – while the other is the Healthcare branch – Rede
Nacional de Cuidados Continuados Integrados (RNCCI), which translates into National Network of
Integrated Continuous Care. Understandings of what is entailed in the concept of ‘care needs’ are
deeply rooted in this dual system and definitions tend to mirror the duality of social care and
healthcare.
The needs for social care involve identification of limitations in functionality that limit the possibility
of living independently considering the context of life of the person, namely in terms of available
material resources and family support. Contrary to social care needs, healthcare needs are
understood as absolute and universal and to be tackled by the national healthcare system, which is
a universal system.
Despite the fragmentation of the system across the healthcare and the social care institutional
sectors, there is a growing consensus among stakeholders and researchers alike that borders are
increasingly blurred and that higher levels of integration of the two types of needs are necessary to
overcome performance problems of the LTC system, both on the healthcare and on the social care
sides.
Understandings of needs are mirrored in how the topic is measured, monitored and regulated. In
Portugal, the data and regulatory infrastructures related to LTC needs reflect the system
fragmentation that separates social care needs from healthcare needs. If for the first there is scarcity
of empirical evidence and administrative data, vagueness of assessment criteria and a regulatory
framework that leaves ample space for arbitrary management on the care providers side, for the
second there is not only a considerable wealth of data but also routine protocols of recording of data
always offering up-to-date information and stricter regulatory frameworks.
The LTC system in Portugal displays traits of a highly centralised system in aspects of funding and
regulation, coupled with traits of a very fragmented system at the level of service provision. This
model applies, in broad terms, to both social care and healthcare LTC services. The State, through
the national government and its constitutive bodies, finances the LTC system in Portugal. The social
care system is funded directly by the Ministry of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, which
involves a contributions-based financing model. The RNCCI system is funded jointly by the Ministry
of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security and by the Ministry of Health. The healthcare component is
part of the National Health System and therefore funded by general taxation.
Discussion about future trends in needs for LTC point to both quantity and quality challenges.
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:
36