Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This thorough book provides valuable information on guardianship and alternative methods for serving judgment-impaired adults. To date, much of contemporary guardianship policy has been developed by muddling through. This book explores developments in case law concerning the scope of the guardian's authority, the proposed national guardianship act, and proposed changes in federal legislation regarding representative payees, and provides guidance in these important areas of concern. This collection conveys the range of viewpoints and geographic diversity that have characterized this subject. Protecting Judgment-Impaired Adults presents an array of topics, showing a sense of the direction guardianship law and practice will be moving in, aiding the work and understanding of policymakers, social workers, health care administrators, and families.
Table of Contents
Evaluating decisionmaking capacity in the elderly /Marshall B. Kapp -- Elder abuse and guardians of elderly incompetents / Lawrence A. Frolik -- Uses of guardianship as a protective intervention for frail, older adults / Madelyn Anne Iris -- A judicial menu--selecting remedies for the incapacitated elder / Bobbe Shapiro Nolan -- Material abuse of the elderly /Kathleen H. Wilber -- Elderly nursing home residents' need for public guardianship services in Tennessee /David Hightower, Alex Heckert, Winsor Schmidt --Social contract, communities and guardians / Erich H. Loewy --Managing guardianships of the elderly / Lloyd Hull, Gary E. Holmes, Ronald H. Karst -- Avoiding guardianship / George J. Alexander.