Case Management: Towards Developing Principles to Interrupt the Effects of Cumulative Disadvantage in Later Life
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Abstract
The growing, diverse population of older adults in Canada will require a range of services to
address their varied needs. Some older adults are aging with limited personal and practical
resources, resulting in later years marked by poor health, difficulty accessing resources and
bodies that are old before their time. Many of these older adults are accessing health and social
care resources and receiving case management services. This study explores the ability of case
management to interrupt the effect of cumulative disadvantage and improve aging. Principles
have been developed to support the design, delivery, and evaluation of existing case management
programs to provide redress for the effects of cumulative disadvantage and to improve the aging
experience. This study is qualitative, informed by a critical theory and interpretivist perspective.
A theoretical framework of cumulative inequality (CI) theory and paradigmatic life course
approach informed the development of the research design, which employed narrative inquiry.
The research was conducted in community agencies in Toronto, Ontario. The study’s findings
show that case management can mitigate the effects of accumulated disadvantage and improve
the aging experience. The principles developed are that case management must 1) address
practical needs, 2) include emotional support, 3) continuity between workers is important, 4)
people’s connections to their families and their social supports, as defined by them, are very
important and should be given priority in casework, and 5) be realistic and compassionate about
what is possible. Further research building on these principles could develop an evidenced based,
critically informed model of case management for older adults aging with limited resources
resulting from recent or limited accumulation and from structural accumulation of disadvantage.