Skip navigation
Know something we don't? Submit a calls for paper announcement
Choose Category:

Family Caregiving calls for papers / publications

6 calls for papers / publications listed in Family Caregiving 

Call for Papers: Journal of Applied Gerontology
06/30/2012
Journal of Applied Gerontology

Call for Papers: Journal of Applied Gerontology

The Official Journal of the Southern Gerontological Society

The Journal of Applied Gerontology (JAG) provides an international forum for information that has clear and immediate applicability to the health, care, and quality of life of older persons.
Each issue brings you the latest research and analysis from the field—and helps you apply it to your everyday practice.

Comprehensive Coverage
The Journal of Applied Gerontology publishes articles in all subdisciplines of gerontology whose findings, conclusions, or suggestions have clear and sometimes immediate applicability to the problems encountered by older persons as well as articles that inform research and the development of interventions. With JAG you'll have access to original studies by distinguished authors on a wide range of gerontological issues.

The Journal of Applied Gerontology particularly invites manuscripts featuring the systematic evaluation and outcomes assessment of programs, services, and initiatives targeting older populations.

JAG brings you comprehensive coverage of all areas of gerontological practice and policy, such as:

• Caregiving
• Exercise
• Death and dying
• Physical activity
• Ethnicity and aging
• Technology and care
• Advanced directives
• Housing
• Long-term care
• Mental health
• Retirement planning
• Sexuality
• Volunteering

Gerontological Nurse, Gerontologist, Health Services Researcher, Home Health Nurse, Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Social Worker
Call for Papers for a Special Thematic Issue of the Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care: Chronic Illness at the End of Life
07/15/2012
Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care

Call for Papers for a Special Thematic Issue of the Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care: Chronic Illness at the End of Life

Deadline: July 15, 2012

The Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care invites manuscripts for a special thematic issue on chronic illness at the end of life.

Appropriate topics may be related to a range of medical diagnoses: Cancer, ESRD, Alzheimer’s, COPD, HIV, etc. and challenges encountered and opportunities presented at the end stages of the disease process. Issues could pertain to the needs of individuals diagnosed with the illness, caregivers (family and professional), health care systems, and policy. Also manuscripts could address: challenges faced by people facing multiple illnesses; challenges, innovations, and interventions in care of persons with chronic illness at EOL; pain management/palliative care issues; and the role of the social worker and the interdisciplinary teams consideration in care of persons with chronic illness at EOL. Manuscripts could focus on a single illness or compare issues/interventions across illnesses. Also, a range of practice settings, hospice, hospital, nursing homes, assisted living could serve as a focus for manuscripts. As always, international perspectives and cross-cultural research are welcome.

Please address questions to Editor-in-Chief, Ellen L. Csikai, PhD at ecsikai@sw.ua.edu<mailto:ecsikai@sw.ua.edu>.

Manuscripts for this issue are due by July 15, 2012 and must be submitted online to ScholarOne:
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/wswe

Editor: Ellen L. Csikai, LCSW, MPH, PhD Professor, School of Social Work
The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL

MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSIONS
Journal of Social Work in End-of Life and Palliative Care receives all manuscript submissions electronically via the ScholarOne Manuscripts website located at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/wswe. ScholarOne Manuscripts allows for rapid submission of original and revised manuscripts, as well as facilitating the review process and internal communication between authors, editors and reviewers via a web-based platform. ScholarOne Manuscripts technical support can be accessed via http://scholarone.com/services/support/. If you have any other requests please contact the journal’s editor at ecsikai@sw.ua.edu.

Health Services Researcher, Home Health Nurse, Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Physician Researcher, Social Worker
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Aging & Mental Health: Asian Families and Well-Being in Later Life
06/15/2012
Aging & Mental Health

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Aging & Mental Health: Asian Families and Well-Being in Later Life

Special issue editors: Sheung-Tak Cheng Kee Lee Chou and Steven H. Zarit

Aging & Mental Health, a leading interdisciplinary journal focused on the aging process and mental health, is calling for papers for a special issue devoted to topics concerning Asian Families and Well-being in Later Life. Papers reporting empirical research on, but not limited to, intergenerational relationships, filial piety, family caregiving, roles of older persons in contemporary families, and generativity in later life are especially welcome. Papers must address the relationships between family functioning and well-being (life satisfaction, emotional well-being, depressive symptoms, etc.) of older adults. Each paper must include explicit data on one or more Asian populations; data on Asian ethnic groups in non-Asian countries are not included in this category.

Authors who are interested in submitting a paper to this special issue are invited to send a proposal to Sheung-Tak Cheng at takcheng@ied.edu.hk by June 15, 2012. The proposal should include a synopsis of no more than 300 words structured into the following sections: Background, Objectives, Methods, Results, and Conclusion and Discussion. In the proposal, please specify whether you intend to submit a regular article (5,000 words) or a brief report (2,000 words).

Upon initial screening by the editors, authors will be invited to submit papers formally to the special issue. Deadline for the full paper will be October 15, 2012. All submitted papers will be peer-reviewed and the editors will make the final decision on publication based on recommendations of the peer reviews.

For author guidelines for preparing the full paper, please refer to
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1360-7863&linktype=44.

Steven H. Zarit, Ph.D.
Professor and Head
Dept. of Human Development and Family Studies
Henderson Bldg. South 211
Penn State University
University Park, PA 16802
Phone: 814-865-5260
Fax: 814-863-7963

Academic, Gerontological Nurse, Gerontologist, Health Services Researcher, Public Health Expert, Public Health Worker, Social Scientist, Social Worker
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Aging & Mental Health: Dementia and Dementia Care in Asia
06/15/2012
Aging & Mental Health

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Aging & Mental Health: Dementia and Dementia Care in Asia

Special issue editors: Sheung-Tak Cheng and Steven H. Zarit

Aging & Mental Health, a leading interdisciplinary journal focused on the aging process and mental health, is calling for papers for a special issue devoted to the topic of dementia and dementia care in Asia. Papers reporting empirical research on, but not limited to, demographic trends of dementia prevalence, diagnostic issues, cognitive deficits, behavioral problems, stigma, caregiver mental health, abuse, management of dementia in residential settings, and bereavement, are especially welcome. Each paper must include explicit data on one or more Asian populations; data on Asian ethnic groups in non-Asian countries are not included in this category.

Authors who are interested in submitting a paper to this special issue are invited to send a proposal to Sheung-Tak Cheng at takcheng@ied.edu.hk by June 15, 2012. The proposal should include a synopsis of no more than 300 words structured into the following sections: Background, Objectives, Methods, Results, and Conclusion and Discussion. In the proposal, please specify whether you intend to submit a regular article (5,000 words) or a brief report (2,000 words).

Upon initial screening by the editors, authors will be invited to submit papers formally to the special issue. Deadline for the full paper will be October 15, 2012. All submitted papers will be peer-reviewed and the editors will make the final decision on publication based on recommendations of the peer reviews.

For author guidelines for preparing the full paper, please refer to
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1360-7863&linktype=44.

Behavioral Scientist, Gerontological Nurse, Gerontologist, Health Services Researcher, Home Health Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Social Scientist, Social Worker
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics: Aging and Long-Term Care
09/15/2012
International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics: Aging and Long-Term Care

The deadline for submission for this issue is September 15, 2012.

Guest Editors: Lisa A. Eckenwiler and Carol Levine

The past several decades have seen significant improvement in the health of older adults. In the United States and many other parts of the world, people are living longer and with less chronic disability than ever before. The aging population is burgeoning. While currently the proportion of older persons is 17 percent, by 2050 it is expected to be 26 percent. The oldest old, or those eighty and above, will increase from being just 1.4 percent of the population to 4.3 percent. The elderly, and especially the oldest old, are disproportionately women. Their caregivers are also disproportionately women, as family care is the predominant mode of care. Projections further suggest that elderly populations in many developing countries are growing more rapidly than those in affluent ones. Nearly 250 million of the approximately 420 million people over sixty-five live in developing countries, and expectations are that the majority will live there in coming decades. Compared to wealthier countries, these mostly low and middle-income countries will undergo this demographic shift quite quickly, even as they continue to contend with the burden of diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, and with considerably less in the way of resources, including human resources.

These changing demographics generate a greater need for long-term care, whether that is provided in the home, in community settings, or in institutions. While there has been considerable debate concerning the nature and extent of future long-term care needs, especially given declining rates of disability in recent decades, the consensus is that they will grow. While governments, global health organizations like the WHO and PAHO, and other agents have acknowledged the importance of addressing current and coming demands related to aging and long-term care, the current state of the dependent elderly and of long-term care systems around the world are, on the whole, fragile and in urgent need of attention. Moreover, analyses and recommendations that are informed by feminist approaches are largely lacking.

This special issue of IJFAB aims to contribute to the ongoing conversations around ethics and policy in aging and long-term care. We invite essays written from a feminist perspective on any topic related to aging and long-term care. Possible topics include:

What characterizes a feminist approach to aging and/or long-term care and what contributions can it make to theory and policy?

How do feminist views about "family" affect long-term care approaches?

What is the structure of income provision for the aged in a particular country or region and what are its ethical implications?

What are the ethical implications of different kinds of support systems for the dependent elderly?

How is long-term care labor gendered and what ethical concerns does this raise?

How can a feminist vision of long-term care accommodate cultural and religious traditions that place special responsibilities for long-term care on women and girls?

What are the implications of the feminization of labor migration on the provision of long-term care needs around the world?

What is the structure of labor and or economic policy in a given country or region and what are its ethical implications for family caregivers?

How are representations of old age gendered and "performed" in the media and in the arts, and what are the ethical and health implications?

Submission instructions for authors are available at http://www.ijfab.org/style_guidelines.html

Papers should be submitted in Microsoft Word format as email attachments to IJFAB@sunysb.edu.

The submission deadline for this issue is September 15, 2012.

Academic, Gerontologist, Health Services Researcher, Policy Analyst, Public Health Expert, Social Scientist, Social Worker
Call for Papers for Two Special Issues of Palliative Medicine
10/01/2012
Palliative Medicine

Call for Papers for Two Special Issues of Palliative Medicine

Call for papers for two forthcoming special editions:

1. Family Carers in Palliative care
Guest edited by Prof Sheila Payne and Prof Gunn Grande

It is widely recognised that family, friends and significant others (hereafter called ‘family carers’) provide care to patients during advanced illness and through the process of dying. They have an essential role in providing physical care, emotional and social support, financial resources, advocacy and anticipatory care, and in negotiating and managing care during the final phases of life. The presence of family carers who are able and willing to provide care can facilitate patient choices, such as place of care and death at home. It is a challenging and demanding role which may have physical, psychological, social and financial consequences for carers which outlasts the period of care and may influence their bereavement. Family carers occupy an ambiguous position, being both providers and potentially recipients of care.

This proposed Special Edition will serve as a useful resource for everyone interested in improving support to family carers. It is written for researchers, clinicians, managers, educators and policy makers working in, or responsible for, palliative care and hospice services. The special edition will focus on care provided by adults to adults who are in the palliative phase of their condition. It will cover care provided in a range of settings including the home, hospital, care home (nursing home) for older people, hospice and other settings.

Such knowledge is essential for informing the construction, evaluation, and promotion of supportive interventions that promote well-being directly for family carers and indirectly for patients. Hence, the call for papers for this special issue invites theoretical and research-based manuscripts that address the cumulative and interactive effects of individual, family, community, organizations, services, and policy factors on family carers’ well-being. Thus we call for manuscripts that target research from health and social care perspectives with a primary focus on family carers within a context of palliative and end of life care.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

Promoting needs assessments of family carers with implications for targeting appropriate interventions
Identifying factors associated with adverse effects of care giving
Systematic reviews of the impact of carers interventions on outcomes
International or national comparisons of carers economic policies and their influence on health decision-making
Identifying the needs of specific groups of carers and their experiences

2. Understanding of palliative care in non-malignant disease
Guest edited by Prof Marie Fallon

In many countries specialist palliative care grew out of and has been closely associated with cancer care. This has led to challenges in providing palliative care for patients with non-malignant disease; knowledge, attitudes and skills have been strongly affected by this background. Modern palliative care in the cancer setting is more integrated than before and can move in and out of patient care, but this may not always be true for patients with other diagnoses.

This special edition will focus on developing our knowledge base regarding the palliative care of those with non-malignant disease. We particularly seek papers from those working outside specialist palliative care which add to our understanding of how palliative care can contribute to the care and meet the needs of those with non-malignant disease. Our aim is to publish rigorous empirical (original research or reviews), methodological or theoretical work to further our understanding of palliative care in non-malignant disease.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

Understanding what colleagues from non-palliative care specialties require from palliative care to meet the needs of different patient groups.

Learning from diverse health care settings and services across different counties about effective collaboration between palliative care and other specialties.

How to educate people to provide effective high quality palliative care to those with non-malignant disease.

The use of guidelines or national frameworks for providing end of life care to those with non-malignant disease.

The views of patients and carers on developments in non-malignant palliative care.

New methods of investigating these issues.

Before submission authors should carefully read the journal’s Author Guidelines http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journals/Journal201823?#tabview=manuscriptSubmission

Authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through Manuscript Central: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/palliative-medicine. Submissions are encouraged by 1st October 2012. For further information please contact the Editorial Office: debbie.ashby@bristol.ac.uk

Guest Editors
Professor Sheila Payne
Director of the International Observatory on End of Life Care
Help the Hospices Chair in Hospice Studies
Lancaster University

Professor Gunn Grande
Professor of Palliative Care
School of Nursing, Midwifery & Social Work
University of Manchester

Professor Marie Fallon
St Columba’s Hospice Chair of Palliative Medicine
University of Edinburgh

Family Caregiver, Health Economist, Health Services Researcher, Home Health Nurse, Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Physician Researcher