|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Emily K. AbelPublisher: New York University Press Imprint: New York University Press Volume: 2 ISBN: 9781479815388ISBN 10: 1479815381 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 01 October 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsAbel returns to important questions about carework 30 years after her first book, and finds dramatic changes in direct care resources and the context of care. She writes with empathy for direct caregivers as a family caregiver herself as well as a cancer survivor. My favorite sections of the book focus on dementia care, particularly her look at Arthur Kleinman's transformation into a dementia caregiver, and when Abel takes a contemporary turn and focuses on the ways in which the pandemic exposed and exacerbated the crisis in care. While we are all familiar with how nursing homes failed during the pandemic, these stories of family members fighting for their institutionalized relatives, still feel new and crucially important to read. These are the stories that Abel leaves us with, along with a strident call for change, in the conclusion of her book.-- Meika Loe, author of Aging our Way: Lessons for Living from 85 and Beyond Abel writes with empathy for direct caregivers as a family caregiver herself as well as a cancer survivor. While we are all familiar with how nursing homes failed during the pandemic, these stories of family members fighting for their institutionalized relatives, still feel new and crucially important to read. * Meika Loe, author of <i>Aging our Way: Lessons for Living from 85 and Beyond</i> * Drawing upon her deep knowledge and first-person accounts, from the nineteenth century to the COVID-19 pandemic, Emily Abel portrays both the joyful and heart-breaking aspects of family caregivers’ struggles to care for elderly people with dementia. This book will spur everyone to ask: why don’t we as a country do better for both the elderly and their caregivers? * Joan C. Tronto, author of <i> Caring Democracy: Markets, Equality and Justice</i> * Here you have a poignant, thoughtful, and extraordinarily useful account of trends that will curse us all unless we take action now. Call it investment in infrastructure, improved social insurance, commitment to common decency, or all of the above: we need a better, more sustainable system of care provision. The qualitative research highlighted here helps show us the way forward. * Nancy Folbre, author of <i>Valuing Children: Rethinking the Economics of the Family</i> * Abel returns to important questions about carework 30 years after her first book, and finds dramatic changes in direct care resources and the context of care. She writes with empathy for direct caregivers as a family caregiver herself as well as a cancer survivor. My favorite sections of the book focus on dementia care, particularly her look at Arthur Kleinman's transformation into a dementia caregiver, and when Abel takes a contemporary turn and focuses on the ways in which the pandemic exposed and exacerbated the crisis in care. While we are all familiar with how nursing homes failed during the pandemic, these stories of family members fighting for their institutionalized relatives, still feel new and crucially important to read. These are the stories that Abel leaves us with, along with a strident call for change, in the conclusion of her book. * Meika Loe, author of <i>Aging our Way: Lessons for Living from 85 and Beyond</i> * Drawing upon her deep knowledge and first-person accounts, from the nineteenth century to the COVID-19 pandemic, Emily Abel portrays both the joyful and heart-breaking aspects of family caregivers' struggles to care for elderly people with dementia. This book will spur everyone to ask: why don't we as a country do better for both the elderly and their caregivers? * Joan C. Tronto, author of <i> Caring Democracy: Markets, Equality and Justice</i> * Author InformationEmily K. Abel is Professor Emerita at the UCLA-Fielding School of Public Health. She is the author of many books, including Hearts of Wisdom: American Women Caring for Kin, 1850-1940; Limited Choices: Mable Jones, A Black Children’s Nurse in a Northern White Household (with Margaret K. Nelson); and Elder Care in Crisis: How the Social Safety Net Fails Families. Her book Tuberculosis and the Politics of Exclusion won the 2008 Viseltear Award for outstanding book in the history of public health from the Medical Care Section, American Public Health Association. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |