1st Edition

Housing for the Elderly Planning and Policy Formulation in Western Europe and North America

By Leonard Heumann, Duncan Boldy Copyright 1982

    During the 1970s housing and social welfare policy as it affected the elderly was changing throughout Western society. Conventional high-rise apartments and institutionalized nursing or residential homes were no longer the sole public responses to housing the elderly. In place of these two extremes on the housing continuum was a variety of intermediate supportive systems that aided independent living. Assisted Independent Living (AIL) programmes were designed to keep the elderly in as independent a living environment as possible despite increasing functioning disabilities and frailties that often accompany advancing age.

    Originally published in 1982, this book defines sheltered housing, traces its development in Western society and analyses its success under several variations in Great Britain. The British analysis focuses on those aspects of the sheltered housing programme that had wider relevance to the development of AIL housing policy in Europe and North America.

    Notes on Authors.  Preface.  1. The Growing Need and Demand for Sheltered Housing  2. The Evolution of Sheltered Housing  3. The Function of Different Sheltered Housing Categories  4. The Sheltered Housing Warden  5. Management of Sheltered Housing  6. The Future of Sheltered Housing.  Appendix: Warden Activities by Activity Type and Service Function for the Devon and West Midlands Surveys.  Index.

    Biography

    Leonard Heumann and Duncan Boldy