Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark

The free choice of a home-care provider was introduced in Danish home care in 2001. This article discusses the overall premises for the introduction of free choice in home care and how it constitutes an overarching response to the crisis of the welfare state. The government at that time intended f...

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Main Author: Tine Rostgaard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College 2011-06-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2042
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spelling doaj-fe477fd91c634a8881005661a0f8120e2020-11-24T22:58:13ZengOslo and Akershus University CollegeNordic Journal of Social Research1892-27832011-06-01210.7577/njsr.20421224Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in DenmarkTine Rostgaard0SFI –The Danish National Centre of Social Research The free choice of a home-care provider was introduced in Danish home care in 2001. This article discusses the overall premises for the introduction of free choice in home care and how it constitutes an overarching response to the crisis of the welfare state. The government at that time intended free choice to lead to more user-led services, more cost-efficient services, and the development of a care market, all in line with its ideology. The article argues that to achieve these ambitions, the government introduced many new but implicit assumptions about the role and the responsibilities of the user of care. On the basis of qualitative interviews with elderly users, care workers, and care assessors, the article examines these assumptions and their implications for the user. The findings show that most users desire continuity in care more than the opportunity to ‘exit' a care relationship. Moreover, users do not rate quality any higher in the private for-profit sector than in the public. The article concludes that consumerism is in Denmark now part of the logic of governance, thereby changing the conditionality of the welfare state and its subjects, and creating new forms of risks, responsibilities, and dependencies. https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2042choicehome helpDenmarkconsumerismelderly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tine Rostgaard
spellingShingle Tine Rostgaard
Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
Nordic Journal of Social Research
choice
home help
Denmark
consumerism
elderly
author_facet Tine Rostgaard
author_sort Tine Rostgaard
title Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
title_short Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
title_full Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
title_fullStr Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
title_full_unstemmed Care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in Denmark
title_sort care as you like it: the construction of a consumer approach in home care in denmark
publisher Oslo and Akershus University College
series Nordic Journal of Social Research
issn 1892-2783
publishDate 2011-06-01
description The free choice of a home-care provider was introduced in Danish home care in 2001. This article discusses the overall premises for the introduction of free choice in home care and how it constitutes an overarching response to the crisis of the welfare state. The government at that time intended free choice to lead to more user-led services, more cost-efficient services, and the development of a care market, all in line with its ideology. The article argues that to achieve these ambitions, the government introduced many new but implicit assumptions about the role and the responsibilities of the user of care. On the basis of qualitative interviews with elderly users, care workers, and care assessors, the article examines these assumptions and their implications for the user. The findings show that most users desire continuity in care more than the opportunity to ‘exit' a care relationship. Moreover, users do not rate quality any higher in the private for-profit sector than in the public. The article concludes that consumerism is in Denmark now part of the logic of governance, thereby changing the conditionality of the welfare state and its subjects, and creating new forms of risks, responsibilities, and dependencies.
topic choice
home help
Denmark
consumerism
elderly
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/njsr/article/view/2042
work_keys_str_mv AT tinerostgaard careasyoulikeittheconstructionofaconsumerapproachinhomecareindenmark
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