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Ageing and the Crisis in Health and Social Care

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Neoliberal political discourses have normalised the belief in northern European countries that individuals are responsible for their health and wellbeing, regardless of social class, gender or ethn...
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  • 16 December 2021
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Neoliberal political discourses have normalised the belief in northern European countries that individuals are responsible for their health and wellbeing, regardless of social class, gender or ethnic background.

Drawing on examples from Germany, Sweden and the UK, Simmonds critically examines how the neoliberalisation and marketisation of health and social care have created an adverse environment for older people, who lack social and cultural capital to access the care they need. This crucial analysis scrutinises provision for ageing populations on an individual, national and global level.

Challenging current political and social policy approaches, this rigorous text discusses innovative solutions to contemporary challenges in a complex care system.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 162
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Series: Ageing in a Global Context
Publication Date: 16 December 2021
ISBN: 9781447348597
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gerontology, Care of the elderly, MEDICAL / Health Care Delivery, MEDICAL / Health Policy, Social welfare, social policy and social services, Health systems and services
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“We need to move from a neoliberal belief that older people are dependent, to an understanding that care is a human right that we must guarantee as a society. This book helps us move in this direction.” Marion Repetti, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland HES-SO Valais // Wallis
Bethany Simmonds is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Aberystwyth University and has research expertise in health, wellbeing and ageing; intersecting with gendered, classed, ethnic and ‘dis’abled identities.

1. Introduction

2. Discourse, Capital, Intersectionality and Precarity

3. Globalisation, Neoliberalism and Welfare State Models: A Comparative Analysis

4. Failing Health and Social Care in the UK: Austerity, Neoliberal Ideology and Precarity

5. Public Health, Emergency Settings and End of Life Care

6. The COVID-19 Health and Social Care Challenge

7. Innovative Solutions and Cultural Change

Appendices