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Informal carers: the backbone of long-term care Budapest, February 22nd 2010 Manfred Huber, Ricardo Rodrigues, Frédérique Hoffmann, Katrin Gasior and Bernd Marin
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Portrait of Informal Carers Challenges to avoid future Care Gaps Further Research & Preliminary Conclusions
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Portrait of Informal Carers
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More than 80% of all care is provided by family carers By love? By choice? By opportunity? By constraint?
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Who cares? Source: OECD (2005); National Sources for Israel and the Slovak Republic; EUROFAMCARE national reports (2004). Relationship between the carer and the care recipient in percentage
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Labour of love Source: EUROFAMCARE and national sources. Family help as a percentage of help to people aged 75+ by country and domain, 2000/2001
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Other types of help In Russia financial support ‘is the most widespread form of help that older parents receive from their adult children (Kholostova, 2002 p.16). Help in running a farm as a subsistence means is also more widespread in Eastern Europe
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It‘s a Woman‘s World Source: National sources, OECD (2005) and EUROFAMCARE national reports. Regardless of „care regimes“ Family carers by gender and country
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Carers: United in Diversity Source: Own calculations based on Walker (1999). Intimacy at a distance in the North Sharing roof and care in the South Percentage of the population aged 15+ providing informal care to a relative aged 60+ (1999)
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Loneliness in very old-age... Living arrangements for older people, by gender (based on 2001 Census data) Source: UNDESA/Population Division (2005), Eurostat 2001 Census data. Older Northern Europeans likely to live alone… … unlike older Southern Europeans (albeit less and less so) Greece – Total 65+ Source: Karagiannaki (2005)
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What Children Want Source: Eurobarometer (2008), question: 7a. Older people want to age in place but... Question 7a: If your elderly parent lives alone and needs long-term care, what in your opinion would be the best option?
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Overburdened Carers? Source: EUROBAROMETER (2007) EUROBAROMETER (2007):In your opinion, do dependent older people rely too much on their relatives? Lack of care services… Providing care to co- residents… Heavy care… … explaining carers’ burden?
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Full-time carers are likely to experience some degree of isolation and/or psychological distress (depression, anxiety…) Countries from the NMS who feel they should take care of the elderly themselves also report high levels of over-reliance
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Ageing Carers They could endanger their own physical & mental health: In Italy 10% of care is provided by the 80+ In Kyrgyz Rep. with high levels of emigration, older people are carers of their grandchildren...is this also a pattern for other ‘donor’ countries?
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Challenges to avoid future ‘care gaps’
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A mid-life Occupation Source: OECD (2005), EUROFAMCARE national reports. Providing care for older family members by country and age group
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Age group with the largest share of informal carers is the 45-64 year olds This group is also being courted through the Lisbon Agenda to remain longer in the labour market...particularly women.
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Reconciliation of care and paid work Source: National sources, EUROFAMCARE national reports, Lamura et al. (2006). Employment status of main carers by country and domain
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Across the EU on average just over 40% of informal carers were in gainful employment Many caregivers end their professional career (50% in the NL) or reduce their hours of work as a result of caring.
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Advantages of remaining in paid work Income and pension rights Helps to maintain social networks Offers a temporary relief from caring role Enhances self-esteem Offers the opportunity to share concerns with colleagues in a similar situation But…financial help to family carers varies among countries
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What about attendance allowances? Amounts of attendance allowances in percentage of net wage of APW and its beneficiaries (2007 or most recent date) Source: Facts and Figures on Long-term care: Europe and North America (2009)
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What might carers look like in the future?
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Demographics bound to change picture Gender mainstreaming in policies (or lack of) Conciliating support for carers and employment policies Source: Eurostat “Support ratio”: number of women aged 45-64 for each 80 year-old (2006 or 2005)
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The demographic future of CARERs has already started – older and more often male Source: EUROFAMCARE national reports (2004). Average age of carers
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The migrant carer to compensate for family care 15-20% of all Italians needing long-term care are cared for by “badanti” – migrant, mostly female carers from Ukraine, Romania... Austria has ‘legalised’ the so-called 24-hours care both in terms of labour law and in terms of nursing legislation Support and integration of migrant carers
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Thought-provoking questions Ageing of carers: will (healthier) 65+ spouses take over from their daughters and daughters-in-law? Reconciliation of work and care duties…reconciliation of employment policies and support for care Who will take care of the elderly living in the ‘donor countries’?
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Further information European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research Berggasse 17 | A-1090 Vienna www.euro.centre.org E-Mail: hoffmann@euro.centre.org rodrigues@euro.centre.org
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Thank you for your attention!
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