About this Research Topic
The juxtaposition of increased demand for care and decreased availability of a trained workforce raises several pertinent issues, including workforce education and distribution, models for healthcare payment to providers and health professions students, innovations in long-term care systems, use of technology to aid and expand workforce performance, and education and assistance models for informal caregivers. This Research Topic aims to bring together the latest data, current analyses, and innovative models related to the formal and informal workforce caring for older adults now and in the future. The goal is to provoke thinking about what could be done by educators, community and health organizations, social service agencies, and policymakers, among others, to maximize the capacity and competency of the future healthcare workforce in every country to meet the needs of the growing population of older adults.
We welcome submissions on the following topics, but not limited to:
• Projections of demand for aged care, gerontology and geriatric medicine specialists in each discipline by country or region;
• Analysis of the adequacy of current approaches to training the health and social workforce to deliver the services required for the older population of the future;
• Evaluation of curricula content for educating health professionals of various disciplines to care for older adults;
• Models to train informal carers to care for older adults in terms of content, delivery modality, and ongoing support;
• Use of technological innovations to support health professionals in caring for older adults who reside in remote areas;
• Use of technological innovations to enhance ongoing support and quality of care for older adults with chronic conditions, including impact on capacity of workforce;
• The economic costs to deliver services to older people in both urban and rural settings;
• Aged care service access and workforce availability;
• The influence of payment and resource models on workforce availability.
Keywords: Health and social care workforce, workforce training, geriatric medicine, interdisciplinary education, informal caregivers, aged care and health service costs, health workforce shortage, population ageing, chronic diseases, multimorbidity, projections for
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.