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Articles

Using Conflict Theory to Explore the Role of Nursing Home Social Workers in Home- and Community-Based Service Utilization

Pages 859-869 | Received 10 Dec 2008, Accepted 02 Mar 2009, Published online: 14 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Nursing home social work (NHSW) practitioners are central to home- and community-based service (HCBS) utilization. They assist residents with long-term care (LTC) decision-making and coordinate community-based LTC supports and services for older adults transitioning back into the community after a rehabilitative nursing home (NH) stay. As members of multiple groups, they must simultaneously balance the needs of NH residents, the NH organization, and social policies related to LTC. To date, policy research on HCBS has been atheoretical in that it has not accounted for the possible inherent conflicts that adversely affect the discharge planning practices of NHSW practitioners. This article applies the Conflict Theory to (a) explore the competing interests of the NH industry and the nation's government, (b) examine the potential effect of these competing interests on the effectiveness of NHSW discharge planning practices, and (c) present a conceptual framework to further investigate the relationship between NHSW and both individual LTC outcomes and national policy initiatives aimed at increasing HCBS utilization.

I express my thanks to Dr. Nancy Miller and Dr. Leslie Morgan for their insightful comments on this research.

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