3.8 Article

User choice and the changing notion of social citizenship in Swedish elderly care

Journal

NORDIC SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 91-106

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/2156857X.2021.1948443

Keywords

User choice in social care; social citizenship; social rights; elderly care; Swedish welfare state

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This article explores the 2009 user choice reform in Swedish elderly care and analyzes how policymakers balanced the tension between choice and equal access to quality care for older citizens. It addresses three research questions regarding users' roles and responsibilities, the role of local authorities, and the notion of social citizenship for older people. The findings indicate that the reform encouraged users to make choices but also held them responsible for ensuring service quality, while advocating for local authorities to ensure quality through contracts with authorized providers. The article suggests that the reform promotes a more libertarian notion of social citizenship, emphasizing individual responsibility.
This article deals with the 2009 user choice reform in Swedish elderly care. It analyses how the tension between choice and older citizens' equal access to good quality care was dealt with by the policymakers who introduced it. Three overarching research questions are addressed in the analysis: (i) what role and responsibilities did the Swedish user choice reform assign to the users and how did the policymakers view users' ability to make an informed choice? (ii) How did the policymakers view the role and responsibilities of the local authorities and what tools were the local authorities given to ensure access to good quality elderly care for all citizens? (iii) Can the new user choice reform be said to contain a new notion of social citizenship for older people in Sweden? The findings suggest that while the user choice reform encouraged users to allocate resources and make free choices between providers, it also required users to become more responsible to ensure service quality. The reform also advocated that the local authorities should steer their elderly care sectors through partly new governance tools and secure quality foremost through the entering of contracts with authorized providers. The paper argues that, because of these required new roles and responsibilities, the Swedish user choice reform entails a more libertarian notion of social citizenship, requiring users to take on greater responsibility for their own well-being and protection against risks.

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