Providing informal care in a changing society
TL;DR: A behavioural model on individual caregiving, the Informal Care Model is developed and it is concluded that long-term informal care provision is a complex phenomenon including multiple actors in various contexts.
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Abstract: The ageing of society is leading to significant reforms in long-term care policy and systems in many European countries. The cutbacks in professional care are increasing demand for informal care considerably, from both kin and non-kin. At the same time, demographic and societal developments such as changing family structures and later retirement may limit the supply of informal care. This raises the question as to whether the volume of informal care (in people) will increase in the years ahead. This paper aims to provide a theoretical answer to this question in two steps. First, based on different care models and empirical literature, we develop a behavioural model on individual caregiving, the Informal Care Model. The model states that, in response to the care recipient’s need for care, the intention to provide care is based on general attitudes, quality of the relationship, normative beliefs, and perceived barriers. Whether one actually provides care also depends on the care potential of the social context, being the family, the social network, and the community. Second, we discuss how current policy and societal developments may negatively or positively impact on these mechanisms underlying the provision of informal care. Given the increased need for care among home-dwelling individuals, the model suggests that more people will take up the caregiver role in the years ahead contributing to larger and more diverse care networks. It is concluded that long-term informal care provision is a complex phenomenon including multiple actors in various contexts. More research is needed to test the Informal Care Model empirically, preferably using information on care recipients, informal caregivers and community care in a dynamic design and in different countries. Such information will increase insight in the developments in informal care provision in retrenching welfare states.
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Citations
A research agenda for ageing in China in the 21st century (2nd edition): Focusing on basic and translational research, long-term care, policy and social networks
Evandro Fei Fang,Chenglong Xie,Chenglong Xie,Joseph Adam Schenkel,Chenkai Wu,Qian Long,Honghua Cui,Yahyah Aman,Johannes Frank,Jing Liao,Huachun Zou,Huachun Zou,Ninie Y. Wang,Jing Wu,Xiaoting Liu,Li Tao,Fang Yuan,Zhangming Niu,Guang Yang,Jiangshui Hong,Qian Wang,Guobing Chen,Jun Li,Hou-Zao Chen,Lin Kang,Huanxing Su,Brian C. Gilmour,Xinqiang Zhu,Hong Jiang,Na He,Tao Jun,Sean Xiao Leng,Tanjun Tong,Jean Woo +33 more
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Informal care in Europe: findings from the European Social Survey (2014) special module on the social determinants of health.
TL;DR: Middle‐aged women may become increasingly time squeezed as they are likely to be the first to respond to higher demands for informal care, while they are also the major target groups in employment policies aiming for increased labour market participation.
How to understand informal caregiving patterns in Europe? The role of formal long-term care provisions and family care norms.
TL;DR: This study provided support for the specialization argument by showing that generous formal long-term care provisions crowded-out intensive caregiving, but also encouraged more people to provide (some) informal care.
160
Health effects of informal caregiving across Europe: A longitudinal approach
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TL;DR: The results show that health consequences of caregiving vary not only between different welfare regimes but also between countries of similar welfare state types.
157
Should I Care or Should I Work? The Impact of Work on Informal Care
TL;DR: In this article , the authors used an instrumental variable approach that exploits a unique reform that increased the female State Pension age by up to six years, and found evidence of a trade-off between the intensive margin of work and informal care provided outside the household.
129
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