1. National and regional differences in preparation for future care needs: a comparison of the United States and Germany.
- Author
-
Pinquart, Martin, Sörensen, Silvia, Davey, Adam, and Sörensen, Silvia
- Subjects
OLD age ,PLANNING ,CROSS-cultural studies ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DECISION making ,FORECASTING ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,NEEDS assessment ,SENSORY perception ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SOCIAL responsibility ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Planning for future care needs is likely to be influenced by both policy and culture. We compared attitudes regarding the usefulness of planning ahead for future care needs, processes of preparation for these needs (becoming aware of the risk of future care needs, gathering information about available options, deciding on preferences, concrete planning), and outcomes of preparation (e.g., knowledge about services) in 294 East German, 288 West German, and 590 American seniors. American respondents had higher preparation scores. Compared to the size of national differences, differences between East and West German seniors were generally smaller. East Germans made fewer decisions on preferences and engaged in less concrete planning. Most of the national and regional differences in preparation for future care needs were reduced or eliminated by controlling for differences in the perceived usefulness of planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF