Introduction and background: Receiving long-term care (LTC) in old age is still widely associated with a definite and dead-end situation. For this reason
preventive and rehabilitative measures for older people already in need of continuous care have not yet been perceived or
treated as health policy issues of great importance. The data for this presentation and case description are based on national
as well as international reports on the provision and quality of long-term care services that were undertaken during the project
INTERLINKS (2008–2011) financed by the 7th Framework Programme by the EU Commission. Special attention in this project is
given to the coordination and transition processes between preventive, rehabilitative, informal, health and social care services
in different European countries.
Aims: Analyse concepts of prevention and rehabilitation within the LTC provision for older people and discuss in this respect good
practice as well as inherent incentives or disincentives across an LTC pathway example in Austria.
Interim result/conclusion: Well-coordinated and comprehensive concepts of prevention and rehabilitation, which might well go beyond our conventional
and often one-dimensional understanding of such measures, represent potential elements for sustainable LTC systems and will
require a lot more attention and integration in the future. Analysing quality of services as well as transition processes
between these services with the help of LTC pathway examples allows for better insight into system-related preventive or rehabilitative
potential and respective incentives and disincentives.