The role of young adults (18-25) in providing formal long term care in England Dr Shereen Hussein Professor Jill Manthorpe 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Monique Boath Consultant – Project Manager. Women & Work: Sector Pathways Initiative.
Advertisements

. Copyright 2010 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs to accompany Strachan, French and Burgess, Managing Diversity 2-1 Chapter 2 Workforce diversity in.
Ethnic Penalties in the Labour Market: The Public-Private Sector Divide Sin Yi Cheung Oxford Brookes University Anthony Heath University of Oxford.
International Social Care Workers in England: their profile, motivations, experiences & expectations Dr Shereen Hussein, Senior Research Fellow Prof Jill.
© 2013 Commonwealth Corporation 1 Closing the Massachusetts Skills Gap: Recommendations and Action Steps April 24, 2013.
Business case for workforce diversity. Diversity - a business imperative External drivers Internal drivers Areas of change l Diverse clientele l EU directives.
22/04/ Logroño, La Rioja 24 March 2014 Promoting work-life balance across the EU Logroño, La Rioja 24 March 2014 Robert Anderson Eurofound.
LONG TERM CARE A Community Based Approach Presented by: Lanette Gonzales Houston, Texas July 26, 2005.
 Marginalisation and pay differentials in the UK social care sector Dr Shereen Hussein King’s College London.
Changing Demographics and Workforce Trends KMSA April 22, 2004 Nancy Laprade Education Cabinet - Kentucky Workforce Investment Board.
Understanding the labour profile and developing strategies to respond 17th March 2011 Nerina Di Lorenzo Director City Infrastructure Moreland City Council.
Ken Jacobs UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education February 2012 Retirement Age and Inequality.
M IGRATION IN L ITHUANIA DEBATE ANSWERING THE CHALLENGES OF MIGRATION AND MULTICULTURALISM.
Older workers - Working Forever? CEET National Conference October 2005 Fran Ferrier CEET.
Class, Race, and Families Defining social class Income distribution and economic restructuring Poverty Race, ethnicity, and class Main points on selected.
Managing a Diverse Workforce
August 2014 Widening Participation It Matters. Workforce Planning Attracting and recruiting the right people to the posts we have identified.
SOSC 200Y Gender and Society Lecture 17: Conflicting roles - working mother.
What Workforce for Personalised Care? Martin Stevens 10 October 2012.
profile of respondents ► 806 managers responded from 22 organisations ► 5 focus groups ► 13% of respondents from public sector, 82% from private sector,
1 Changing attitudes and perceptions about older workers AGE - the European Older People’s Platform Changing attitudes and perceptions about older workers.
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE IN SCOTLAND - OLDER WORKERS IN THE SCOTTISH LABOUR MARKET Emma Hollywood*, Ross Brown**, Mike Danson***, and Ronald McQuaid* *Employment.
We help to improve social care standards March 2013 Excellence through workforce development Karen Stevens Area Officer – Sussex.
Demographic Trends Affecting Cities Population Change.
Strategic Diversity Management Chapter 12. Objectives Explore the development from equal opportunities to managing diversity Understand the role of the.
Promoting Employment and Quality of Work in the Rail Sector Case study: Poland July 2015 EVA Academy Prepared for:
EMPLOYMENT & DISABILITY Joan O’Donnell Disability Federation of Ireland Presentation to Centre for Independent Living National Leader Forum.
Minding the Gap whilst Moving Forward Student Attainment Summit Dr Debra Cureton The University of Opportunity.
Social Determinants of Health Gero 302 Jan SDOH There are nine SDOH as follows: Income inequality-The failure to reduce poverty levels to 1989 level.
International Social Care Workers: People and places in an exchangeable time Policy Research Programme: Workforce Initiative Shereen Hussein Jill Manthorpe.
Fatherhood in the UK: What do we know about non-resident fathers? Eloise Poole Margaret O’Brien, Svetlana Speight, Sara Connolly, Matthew Aldrich 23 rd.
Women on the Move: The Neglected Gender Dimension of the Brain Drain
International care workers in England Shereen Hussein Jill Manthorpe Martin Stevens Social Care Workforce Research Unit King’s College London Photos from.
The new social work degree in England: fresh policies and new students? Shereen Hussein* Social Care Workforce Research Unit King’s College London * On.
Widening Participation in Higher Education: A Quantitative Analysis Institute of Education Institute for Fiscal Studies Centre for Economic Performance.
Gender Inequalities. Changes in Society Average age when married increased 7 years from (men: 35, women: 32) Increasing divorce rate (1971:
Additional analysis of poverty in Scotland 2013/14 Communities Analytical Services July 2015.
CREDITS TO PPIC, CPEC, GREYSTONE GROUP, LAO, COMMUNITY COLLEGE LEAGUE OF CALIFORNIA.
Generic Skills Survey 2003 DRIVERS OF SKILLS NEEDS.
Influences on social work identities: Has the social work degree influenced student motivations to become social workers?
We help to improve social care standards May 2013 Excellence through workforce development Teresa Morrison Area Manager – South West.
International Social Workers in England: An unknown workforce? Shereen Hussein Jill Manthorpe Martin Stevens Social Care Workforce Research Unit King’s.
Older workers and job creation Dr.E.Mestheneos Vice-President, AGE 50+Ellas.
Getting in, Getting by, Getting on Equality in the workplace Alun Thomas.
Apprenticeships……..and the Social Care Sector… Cathryn Henry Employer Services Manager - Hertfordshire October 2010.
©The Work Foundation Putting Dads in Context: A Changing World 5 April 2005 Alexandra Jones The Work Foundation.
Demographics of Congress. 114 th Congress 1.Does the gender composition of the 114 th Congress mirror that of the US population? 2.Why do you think more.
Transition of NCV students from TVET colleges to the Labour Market Presentation to Bridge Post School Access Focus Group 22 October 2015.
Who Works Minimum Wage Jobs? 1. Who Works Minimum Wage Jobs (U.S.) Federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour (since 2009). Nationally, 2,992,000 workers.
The UK Voluntary Sector Workforce Almanac 2011 Please feel free to use and share these slides. Please cite Skills-Third Sector/ NCVO/ TSRC as the source.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002 All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/ Irwin 18-1 Business and Society POST, LAWRENCE, WEBER Managing a Diverse Workforce.
Training and Development: the Missing Part of the Extending Working Life (EWL) Agenda? Sarah Vickerstaff Chris Phillipson and Wendy Loretto.
Earning and learning: the influence of secondment on retention rates in part- time social work qualifying education Jo Moriarty Jill Manthorpe Shereen.
We help to improve social care standards March 2013 Supporting adult social care employers with workforce development Mark Yates Area Manager – Midlands.
WIDENING PARTICIPATION IN A CHANGING FUNDING AND POLICY ARENA Dame Julia Goodfellow, Vice Chancellor University of Kent, and President of Universities.
Can the state set decent standards for gender equality? Jill Rubery European Work and Employment Research Centre Manchester Business School University.
By the end of the chapter you should be able to … Define human resource (workforce) planning Explain the concept of labor turnover Identify internal &
Changing employment relations & reforms of social security systems.
Presentation to OECD Policy Forum on the reassessment of the OECD Jobs Strategy 7-8 July 2005, Tokyo, Japan Better Jobs, Working Smarter.
Copyright … Strode’s College Laws students are free to make use of this ‘Pdf Print files’ for study purposes (they should print them off and take them.
International Social Care Workers: People and places in an exchangeable time Policy Research Programme: Workforce Initiative Shereen Hussein Jill Manthorpe.
Policy Research Programme Social Care Workforce Research Initiative Marie McNay and Hazel Qureshi.
WORK & EDUCATION Matching Skills to Labour Skills Market
The Value of Data For Informing Policy and Practice
we help to improve social care standards
The Value of Data For Informing Policy and Practice
BY Deena Mostafa El-maleh Lecturer of geriatrics & gerontology
Women and Disability Ursula Barry
Figures adapted from the TIEDI Analytical Report #2: Labour outcomes by immigrant class and gender Report available at:
Presentation transcript:

The role of young adults (18-25) in providing formal long term care in England Dr Shereen Hussein Professor Jill Manthorpe 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

The formal/paid Long Term Care workforce in England Relatively old (median age 42 years) Very gendered (women form 80%) Relatively more diverse in terms of ethnicity High prevalence of part time working Low pay and relatively low status Secondary position in the labour market High vacancy and turnover rates 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Recruitment and retention issues 71% of the workforce does ‘direct care work’ with the highest vacancy and turnover rates Particular issues with the private sector (constitutes around 60% of care provision) Very high turnover rate Significantly lower pay rates (among all staff groups) More people leave because ‘pay’ and ‘working conditions’ 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Current strategies Tapping into ‘traditional’ pools Migrants New proposed immigration policies are likely to affect this group Tapping into ‘new pools’ Attracting young people A number of government initiatives Care First Care Ambassador schemes Social Care advertisements Lowering age requirement for the new social work degree 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

But, what do we know of the younger group of workers? The current research focuses on workers Using the emerging National Minimum Data Set for Social Care (NMDS-SC) Coverage (by May 2009 around 400,000 individual workers records- from 24,662 organisations) Advantages (size, uniqueness, up-to-date) Limitations (provided by employers- relatively limited information) Methods of analysis Regression model Time series analysis 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Findings: young workers’ profile year olds form 12% of the care workforce 85% are female 87% are white 87% are direct care workers Under half (44%) are recruited from within the care sector (including placements) 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

How different are they from ‘older’ workers? logistic regression model Significantly more likely to be women (OR=1.2; p=0.002) Significantly less likely to be from Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) groups (OR=0.55; p<0.001) Significantly more likely to have low (only entry level) education (compared to level 2; OR=1.97, p<0.001) Significantly more likely to work in direct care jobs, full time and in the private sector They travel far shorter distances to work 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

In a nutshell Younger workers (18-25) in the care sector are far less diverse in terms of gender and ethnicity than older workers. They have lower educational attainment levels They work very locally They work more in the private sector, which is characterised by lower pay and poorer working conditions 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

What about trends in recruiting younger workers? Employers provided information on: Current age of each worker Date of starting employment Year of joining the sector From these we are able to calculate age at starting the sector and employment (after cleaning the data and removing outliers) A time series analysis of levels of recruiting ‘younger’ and ‘older’ workers from 1980 to to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Time series plot of the number of new entrants to the social care sector by whether they are young (18-25) or older (26-75) workers 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

What seems to be happening over time? From , a general trend of increased employment in the sector Reflecting the growing demand due to demographic factors as well as the expansion of the care sector with a more flexible borders with the health sector Up until 2005 the numbers of new recruits from the older age group continued to exceed that of younger age group year on year. Since 2005, new entrants of both age groups started to decline. Since 2005, the gap between new recruits of ages is narrowing towards the younger age group. Since 2005, the gap between new recruits of ages is narrowing towards the younger age group. 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Discussion of these results Social care sector appears to attract a particular group of young adults: WomenWhite With lower qualifications Many are already working within the sector And are local to place of work The perception of the gendered nature of care work may be more extreme among younger people – it is ‘women’s work’ Possibly links to educational (KS4 and GSCE) factors, as poor white British pupils make the least progress (Strand 2008) 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Discussion of these results 2 Since 2005; interesting trends Why the dip in new recruits while demand continues to increase What is the recent closing gap mean in relation to the effect on the overall profile of workers Combined with recent changes in migrants profile  a very dynamic workforce But are we attracting the right people for the job? 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

Implications How to attract young men? Care work’s image How to enhance care work position in the labour market Society and family perceptions Peer-effects Addressing choices and identities Crucial effect of wages and work conditions (particularly within the care sector) Opportunity to attract young workers from outside the sector and direct from education 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit

References and contacts In-depth analysis of the care workforce, free to download: Social Care Workforce Periodical pubs/periodical/ pubs/periodical/Contacts: 8 to 11 Sep 2010Social Care Workforce Research Unit