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Globalization, women's migration, and the long-term-care workforce. | LitMetric

Globalization, women's migration, and the long-term-care workforce.

Gerontologist

School of Social Work, University of Hawai'i, 1800 East West Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.

Published: February 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • The aging population is increasing the demand for direct long-term-care (DLTC) workers, and developed nations are relying more on immigrant women to meet this need.
  • The article examines global trends, including population aging, globalization, and women's migration, and their impact on the DLTC workforce in the U.S., highlighting social justice issues such as economic inequality and labor feminization.
  • It concludes that while immigration can address workforce shortages in eldercare, it may also lead to the devaluation of the profession and challenges for source countries regarding family and care traditions.

Article Abstract

With the aging of the world's population comes the rising need for qualified direct long-term-care (DLTC) workers (i.e., those who provide personal care to frail and disabled older adults). Developed nations are increasingly turning to immigrant women to fill these needs. In this article, we examine the impact of three global trends-population aging, globalization, and women's migration-on the supply and demand for DLTC workers in the United States. Following an overview of these trends, we identify three areas with embedded social justice issues that are shaping the DLTC workforce in the United States, with a specific focus on immigrant workers in these settings. These include world poverty and economic inequalities, the feminization and colorization of labor (especially in long-term care), and empowerment and women's rights. We conclude with a discussion of the contradictory effects that both population aging and globalization have on immigrant women, source countries, and the long-term-care workforce in the United States. We raise a number of policy, practice, and research implications and questions. For policy makers and long-term-care administrators in receiver nations such as the United States, the meeting of DLTC worker needs with immigrants may result in greater access to needed employees but also in the continued devaluation of eldercare as a profession. Source (supply) nations must balance the real and potential economic benefits of remittances from women who migrate for labor with the negative consequences of disrupting family care traditions and draining the long-term-care workforce of those countries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geront/48.1.16DOI Listing

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