Article Publication Date:
4/1/2009
Summary:
Waivers allow people to pay for needed home health and personal assistance so they may live in community rather than institutional settings. Little research has examined how effectively these programs ensure proper use of health care services or how they improve the health of people with disabilities or at how effective these programs are when people move from institutional to community settings. The bottom line? People with disabilities continue to have unacceptably high rates of disease.
Topics:
Medicaid Waivers
Types/Tools:
Populations:
N/A
Sources:
Research and Training Center on Measurement and Interdependence in Community Living
Programs/Initiatives:
N/A
States:
Keywords:
N/A
Measurement Systems of Person x Environment Interactions; Measurement of Economic Utility; Economic Utility and Related Health Outcomes; Enhancing Community Participation; CIL Services Effect on Community Participation; Community Engagement Evaluation Project; Advanced Science Initiative: A Systematic Review of Participation Literature; Self-Reporting Health Conditions
Contact
Research and Training Center on Independent Living
The University of Kansas, 1000 Sunnyside Ave.
4089 Doyle Center
Lawrence, KS 66045
rtcil@ku.edu
Phone:
785-864-4095
Contact Fax:
785-864-5063
Short URL: http://www.advancingstates.org/node/52065