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A Note from Leanne Clark-Shirley, PhD
Dear Readers,
The Biden Administration is off and running this
spring to advance its American Jobs Plan, which, among other provisions,
calls upon Congress to "solidify the infrastructure of our care
economy by creating jobs and raising wages and benefits for essential home
care workers."
The elevation of home-and-community based
care into the national infrastructure dialogue is an exciting yet long
overdue moment. ASA is proud to release the Spring 2021 issue of Generations during
this moment: As the World Turns: Care Management's Continued Role in an
Ever-Changing Delivery System.
Guest-editors Robert Applebaum and
Jennifer Heston-Mullins of Miami University’s Scripps Gerontology Center
have curated an issue that examines the core, the practice, and the future
of care management, thirty years after Rosalie A. Kane edited an issue on
the then-new practice of case management. It is fitting that this issue
opens with tributes to Dr. Kane and to Joan Litchfield Quinn, both immensely
influential leaders in care practice and policy whom we’ve lost in recent
years.
After Molly Rees Gavin describes The Core Elements of Care Management, we get a detailed
look at A Day in the Life of a Care Manager—2020, while Donna
Benton, Namkee Choi, Kevin Mahoney, and others discuss the intersections of
care management with family care, managed care, and self-direction. Norma
Thomas and Raina Leon explore culture and implicit bias, while offering
steps to improve care management delivery to diverse elders in Future Directions of Care Management: Care Management in a
World of Many Cultures. Then, Bonnie Ewald and Robyn Golden situate
care management in movements such as the Age-Friendly Health Systems
framework as they consider The Role of Care Management in a Changing Healthcare System.
Richard Browdie and Larry Polivka close out the issue with an equally
retrospective and forward-looking conversation on The Future of Care Management in the Aging Network: What
Would Rosalie Say?
What would Rosalie Kane, her late husband
Bob, James Jackson, Phoebe Liebig, and so many other pioneers we've lost
say about this moment? And, what would they have us advocate for and
demand? Their work is far from over—and we hope you draw inspiration from
this issue as you continue yours.
Regards,
Leanne Clark-Shirley, PhD
Vice President, Programs & Thought Leadership
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Researching, Reimagining How We Manage Care
By
Alison Biggar
A Note of Appreciation to Two Women with Vision and Passion
By
Bob Applebaum
Remembering Rosalie A. Kane
By Howard B. Degenholtz, Keren Brown
Wilson, Larry Polivka, and Susan C. Reinhard
A Tribute to Joan Litchfield Quinn (1937–2015)
By Molly Rees Gavin
The Core of Care Management
Care Management at 50: A Life Review
By Bob Applebaum
The Core Elements of Care Management
By Molly Rees Gavin
The Demographics of Care Management
By Holly Dabelko-Schoeny and Sara A.
Moss-Pech
What Do We (Still) Need to Know About Long-term Care
Management?
By Howard B. Degenholtz
A Day in the Life of a Care Manager—2020
Straight from the Source: Consumers’ Take on Care
Management
By Jennifer Heston-Mullins
The Practice of Care Management
Care Managers and Families: Providing the Best Support
By Donna Benton
How Does Care Management Interface with Behavioral Health?
By Namkee G. Choi and Nancy L.
Wilson
Care Management in a Managed Care World: Can They Work in
Concert?
By Carrie
L. Graham
Care Management in Residential Settings: Added Benefit or
Unnecessary Duplication?
By Jennifer
Heston-Mullins and Athena Koumoutzis
Care Management and Self-direction: Are They Compatible?
By Kevin
J. Mahoney, Ellen K. Mahoney and Susan Crisp
Future Directions for Care
Management
Care Management in a World of Many Cultures
By Norma
Thomas and Raina Leon
The Role of Care Management in a Changing Healthcare System
By Bonnie
Ewald and Robyn Golden
Care Management from the State Perspective: Issues,
Challenges, and Improvements
By Sonya
Sanders and Bea Rector
The Future of Care Management in the Aging Network: What
Would Rosalie Say?
By Richard
Browdie and Larry Polivka
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Over the past months, we have worked tirelessly to bring
you a more accessible avenue to access the smart, targeted and bold
articles and news you have always expected from ASA. The titles look a
little different, so here's a refresher on our three publications.
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