Regulation of long-term care for older persons: a scoping review of empirical research
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Date
2023Author
Pot, Anne Margriet
Kok, Josje
Schoonmade, Linda J.
Bal, Roland A.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: Not only care professionals are responsible for the quality of care but other stakeholders including
regulators also play a role. Over the last decades, countries have increasingly invested in regulation of Long Term Care (LTC) for older persons, raising the question of how regulation should be put into practice to
guarantee or improve the quality of care. This scoping review aims to summarize the evidence on regulatory
practices in LTC for older persons. It identifies empirical studies, documents the aims and findings, and
describes research gaps to foster this field.
Design: A literature search (in PubMed, Embase, Cinahl, APA PsycInfo and Scopus) was performed from
inception up to December 12th, 2022. Thirty-one studies were included.
Results: All included studies were from high-income countries, in particular Australia, the US and
Northwestern Europe, and almost all focused on care provided in LTC facilities. The studies focused on
different aspects of regulatory practice, including care users’ experiences in collecting intelligence, impact of
standards, regulatory systems and strategies, inspection activities and policies, perception and style of
inspectors, perception and attitudes of inspectees and validity and reliability of inspection outcomes.
Conclusion: With increasingly fragmented and networked care providers, and an increasing call for person-centred
care, more flexible forms of regulatory practice in LTC are needed, organized closer to daily practice, bottom-up.
We hope that this scoping review will raise awareness of the importance of regulatory practice and foster research in
this field, to improve the quality of LTC for older persons, and optimize their functional ability and well-being
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- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]