ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1981, this book describes day services for adults, a relatively recent development in health and social services at the time. Most people assume immediately that day care is only provided for young children: Day Services for Adults will make it clear that a growing number of services exist by day for adults, and in a diversity and variety which have enormous potential both for those who use them and for those who work in them.

Day Services for Adults reports the results of a five-year national survey. The broad terms of reference of the research were to review the present provision of day centres for adults. To consider the policy questions of staffing and accommodation and to suggest which groups in the community might benefit most from day centres and to advise on how these centres might contribute to the integration and development of local services for those in need.

The result was the first comprehensive investigation of day services in the world. Jan Carter analyses services for the elderly, the mentally handicapped, the mentally ill, the physically handicapped, offenders, drug addicts and those in family care centres sponsored by health, social services, probation and voluntary agencies. By a full coverage of all these groups and their sponsors, unique comparisons between services for the various groups can be made.

Day Services for Adults was intended for those who made decisions about day units and particularly for local authority policy-makers and executive civil servants in local authority health authorities and central government. It was also addressed to those senior professionals practising inside and outside day services: psychiatrists, geriatricians, those practising rehabilitation medicine, senior nursing officers, psychologists, senior social workers and social work administrators.

part

Part One

chapter Chapter 1|10 pages

Introducing Adult day Services

chapter Chapter 2|7 pages

The Context

chapter Chapter 3|4 pages

The Anatomy of Day Services

chapter Chapter 3.1|22 pages

The elderly

chapter Chapter 3.2|18 pages

The mentally handicapped

chapter Chapter 3.3|12 pages

The Physically Handicapped

chapter Chapter 3.4|10 pages

The Mentally Ill

chapter Chapter 3.5|9 pages

The Elderly Confused

chapter Chapter 3.6|11 pages

The Family Day Centre

chapter Chapter 3.7|10 pages

Offenders

chapter Chapter 3.8|9 pages

Mixed Centres

part |152 pages

Part Two

chapter Chapter 4|14 pages

Aims of The Staff

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

‘Bringing People Forward’: Aiming at Training

chapter Chapter 9|14 pages

A ‘Normal Life’: Aiming at Rehabilitation

chapter Chapter 14|5 pages

‘Listening to Users’: Aiming at Relationships

part |68 pages

Part Three

chapter Chapter 16|11 pages

Questions of Satisfaction

chapter Chapter 17|44 pages

Room for Improvement

chapter 18|11 pages

Getting It Together