• Title/Summary/Keyword: Public Housing Welfare Delivery

Search Result 12, Processing Time 0.015 seconds

Factors Influencing Utilization of the Social Services for the Elderly (노인의 사회복지서비스 이용실태와 이용에 영향을 미치는 요인 -경기도 국민기초생활보장노인을 중심으로-)

  • Park, Kyung-Sook
    • Korean Journal of Social Welfare
    • /
    • v.55
    • /
    • pp.283-307
    • /
    • 2003
  • The social services for the elderly have been expending in order to respond to the rapid speed of aging. However, low utilization, exclusion and duplication have been pointed out as significant problems in service utilization of the elderly. This study tried to find out the utilization patterns of social services for the elderly: what kinds of and how many social services the elderly receive from what kinds of and how many organizations, and factors influencing utilization of the social services. It surveyed the entire population of the public assistance recipient elderlies at Kyonggi province in 1999. The results show that duplication is not so significant problem as the low utilization of social services. However, the fact that more than forty five percent of the elderly receives social services from more than two organizations requires the efforts for service linkage and coordination in social service delivery system. The factors, which have relatively big influence on the number of organizations which the elderly use for each social service, were sex and age among the predisposing factors, "living alone" and place for residency among the enabling factors and the number of illness, Activities of Daily Living, Instrumental Activities of Daily Living and inconvenience of housing among the needs factors. These results call for expansion of social services for the elderly especially in the way of achieving distribution balance between the rural and urban area and activation of case management practice and local association of social service delivery agencies for service linkage and coordination.

  • PDF

Barriers to Employment Among Low-Income Mothers in Rural United States Communities

  • Son, Seo-Hee;Dyk, Patricia Hyjer;Bauer, Jean W.;Katras, Mary Jo
    • International Journal of Human Ecology
    • /
    • v.12 no.1
    • /
    • pp.37-49
    • /
    • 2011
  • This article addresses potential barriers to sustained employment for rural low-income mothers. Drawing from a two panel longitudinal sample of 240 families from the Rural Families Speak project, it examines the extent to which human capital and family factors were related to these mothers' ability to be employed. Comparisons are made between mothers, who over a three-year period, were continuously unemployed, intermittently employed, or stably employed. Many of these rural low-income mothers faced multiple individual and family barriers that impacted their labor force participation. Notably food insecurity, mental health, caring for a young child, housing, and a family history of welfare were associated with less stable employment. The implications for public policy and service delivery are discussed.