
The population in Europe is ageing, and the number of older citizens is growing. Consequently, projections predict an increase in care needs. The literature points towards two main challenges. First, older adults with care needs are susceptible to social exclusion. Second, there are growing challenges in professional care services (i.e., overburdened workforce, and budget cuts). Currently, professional care focuses on the medical and physical aspects of care from a deficit approach (looking at what older adults cannot do anymore). However, many caregivers claim that an innovative paradigm shift is needed towards a positive approach (looking at the potentials of older people) and towards caring for social and meaning needs. However, they often lack the competences for this as this is not part of their professional training. Nor does a lifelong learning course on these topics exist.
The SeeMe project aims to improve the quality of care for older adults by contributing to the knowledge of the needs of older adults and by increasing the skills and competences of different groups of caregivers to respond to that needs. The emphasis here is on caregivers’ competences to ‘see’ care as something more than physical and medical care, to ‘see’ the older person behind the patient, ‘see’ social and meaning needs, and ‘see the positive talents and dreams of older
adults, not only their needs. In this way, the SeeMe project contributes to the social inclusion of older adults.