1st Edition

Human Services and Long-term Care A Market Model

By Yoshihiko Kadoya Copyright 2018
    196 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    196 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Providing human service through markets is inherently problematic. Quality care is critical and unsatisfactory human service greatly influences people’s quality of life. Yet, profit for human service providers is essential for sustainable service provision. This book focuses on striking a balance between human services’ need for quality assurance and market providers’ need for profit.

    Introduction: The Human Service Age and New Economics

    1. Studying Human Service Provision through Competitive Markets

    Part I: Care Quality Model for the Human Service Market

    2. The Care Market Model

    3. Verifying the Implementability of the Care Market Model

    4. Verifying the Implementation Effects (Efficacy) of the Care Market Model

    5. Verifying the Financial Sustainability of the Care Market Model

    Part II: Performance Measurement for the Human Service Market

    6. Outcome-based and Process-based Performance Measurement Model for the Human Service Market

    7. Investigating the Empirical Applicability of Process-based Performance Measurement in Human Services Provided through a Competitive Market

    8. Care Workers’ Training

    9. An Industrial Policy to Ensure the Sustainability of the Care Market Model

    Conclusion: Managing the Human Service Market Originating in Japan

    Biography

    Yoshihiko Kadoya is Director of the Hiroshima Institute of Health Economics Research (HiHER) and Professor of Economics, Hiroshima University, Japan.

    This book makes the important point that human services (including long-term care) are very different from other goods and services because the services provided are so heterogeneous and because service quality has such a profound impact on the consumer’s quality of life. The book conducts a comprehensive and interdisciplinary analysis of the market for human services with particular emphasis on the market for long-term care and proposes a novel solution to the market design problem in this sector.’ — Charles Yuji Horioka, Professor, Asian Growth Research Institute

    Based on an integrated approach, this book provides an insightful investigation of the market for long-term care. It offers convincing recommendations toward a more quality-oriented provision of "human" services for the aged, and supports its arguments with a combination of simplistically presented empirical evidence and theoretical discussions that draw from different disciplines, including, most notably, Health Economics and Public Administration. Overall, a must read for academics and policymakers alike.’— Nopphol Witvorapong, Assistant Professor, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand

    Based on the "Care Market Model (CMM)", Yoshihiko Kadoya has produced a path-breaking policy studies on long-term care for the elderly from an interdisciplinary perspective. By taking a model-testing approach and analyzing cases in OECD countries and especially the case in Japan, the integrated discussions of this book provide valuable recommendations for governments in dealing with aging and aged societies. These include the need for governments to implement a model to direct market competition to enhance the quality of services, provide users with service quality information about providers and need to develop a process-based performance measurement for human services. Yoshihiko Kadoya also suggests that the CMM ensures not only efficiency and quality, but also would not be costly for governments provided the gap between the rich and poor stays small when adopting the universal system for long-term care provision. This book is food for thought and Yoshihiko Kadoya welcomes further discussions and refinements from various disciplines.’ — Lee Lai To, Senior Professor and Director of Asian Research Center for International Development, Mae Fah Luang University, Thailand