Australia's New Aged

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Aged Care
Aged Care Assessment Teams
Aged Care Service
ageing population policy analysis
Australian Aged Care
Australian Aged Care Facility
Australian National University
Australian Taxation Office
Author_John McCallum
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Co-resident Caregiver
Contemporary Societies
demographic transition
elder diversity research
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GDP Growth
gerontology policy
health service provision
High Home Ownership
Home Modification Services
Home Stretch
intergenerational equity
Middle Aged Baby Boomers
MLC.
NSW Council
Nursing Home Admission
Own
Parallel Health Systems
Pentridge Prison
post-World War Ii
post-World War Ii Migrant
Radical Prostatectomy
Service System Planning
social welfare reform
Super Funds

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367717483
  • Weight: 450g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The idea that our society is ageing is a popular source of gloomy predictions for the future. We see today's youth struggling in their mature years to pay for the masses of geriatric baby boomers whose productive years lie far behind.

Australia's New Aged shows that this belief is part reality and part myth. While there will be an increase in the proportion of aged people in the next 20 years, this is a temporary phenomenon and it is likely that tomorrow's elderly will quite differently from their parents.

Australia's New Aged examines public policy for the aged in the context of an increasingly vocal and active elderly population and cutbacks to health and welfare spending. The authors argue that policy makers have become trapped in a 'social problem' approach to ageing that assumes the elderly are a homogeneous, disadvantaged group with common interests. They examine a range of cases and identify negative consequences of inappropriate assumptions in terms of structural blindness and brutality. They show that this approach is no longer viable and argue that both policy makers and the aged care industry will need to be more sensitive to diversity and more flexible than ever before.

Australia's New Aged is essential reading for students, policy makers and anyone working with the aged.

John McCallum is Professor of Public Health and Dean of the Faculty of Health at the University of Western Sydney, Macarthur and co-editor of Grey Policy (1990). Karin Geiselhart is a journalist previously employed by the Office for the Status of Women in Canberra.

John McCallum is Professor of Public Health at the University of Western Sydney, Macarthur. Karin Gieselhart is a journalist.

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