Debating “good” care the challenges of dementia care in Shanghai, China

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Abstract

The increasing number of dementia sufferers in China has transformed dementia care from a private issue to a public concern. Nationwide dementia-friendly campaigns have intensified debates about what constitutes “good” care. In response to these campaigns, the Shanghai government proposes a systematic care model, which stresses the need for dementia-care units and professionalization. Non-state actors, however, focus on the relational care model, which integrates Western humanitarian ethics with Confucian values. This article employs cultural and structural frameworks to examine why and how a specific form of “good” care is constructed in China. The debates about the establishment of dementia-care units and the professionalization of eldercare enable us to understand how politics shape certain forms of care.

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APA

Zhang, Y. (2020). Debating “good” care the challenges of dementia care in Shanghai, China. Anthropology and Aging, 41(1), 52–68. https://doi.org/10.5195/aa.2020.266

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