Ann Geriatr Med Res.  2020 Sep;24(3):174-180. 10.4235/agmr.20.0037.

Long-Term Care System in Japan

Affiliations
  • 1Faculty of Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
  • 2National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Aichi, Japan

Abstract

The long-term care insurance (LTCI) system was introduced in Japan in 2000 to address the demands of older persons with disabilities based on the concept of a user-oriented social insurance system with support for independence. Older people with a certification for LTCI service needs can utilize facility services, in-home services, and community-based services depending on their physical and cognitive impairments. After the implementation of the LTCI system, there was a rapid increase in persons certified for LTCI service needs, with a corresponding increase in the financial burden on the government. Therefore, the Japanese government started a disability prevention program in which older people were screened for frailty by the Kihon checklist in addition to a high-risk approach with appropriate prevention programs in each community. After unsatisfactory outcomes of the high-risk approach for disability prevention, the government changed the primary strategy to a community-based population strategy to build a community to seamlessly provide preventive, medical, and long-term care and welfare and housing services to all individuals. Further improvement of the community-based integrated care system is needed for healthy aging in a superaged society.

Keyword

Long-term care insurance; Disability prevention; Kihon checklist; Community-based integrated healthcare system
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