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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Older adults' networks and public care receipt do partners and adult children substitute for unskilled public care? | Author(s) | Niels Schenk, Pearl Dykstra, Ineke Maas |
Journal title | Ageing and Society, vol 34, no 10, November 2014 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press, November 2014 |
Pages | pp 1711-1729 |
Source | journals.cambridge.org/aso |
Keywords | Community care ; Spouses as carers ; Children [offspring] as carers ; Social surveys ; Netherlands. |
Annotation | This study investigates how the reliance on public care and the type of public care received by older people in the Netherlands depends on the availability of partners and adult children. Older people aged 65 years and older were surveyed in the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study at two time-points. Survey results were linked to registry data on public care receipt at the two time-points. Multilevel models revealed that receiving frequent help in the household from children was not associated with public care receipt. Only men having a partner were less likely to receive public care. Further analyses comparing the receipt of skilled and unskilled forms of public care revealed that female partners are especially important in rendering unskilled care unnecessary compared to skilled care. Two arguments may explain the findings. One is that a gender bias exists in processing public care requests: men are perceived as less able to provide care to their female partners. Another is that men lack the skills, or perceive themselves as lacking the care skills that female partners have. Caution is advised against introducing policy measures that increase pressure on female partners. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-150616002 A |
Classmark | PA: P6:SN: P6:SS: 3F: 76H |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
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...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
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