AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how gender dynamics in informal caregiving have evolved across Europe amidst demographic changes, focusing on whether gender gaps in caregiving have shifted over time.
  • Research indicates that younger men show a decrease in informal caregiving outside the home, while women's caregiving trends remain stable, leading to an increased prevalence of caregiving within households.
  • The findings highlight varying trends in gender care gaps across different European regions, suggesting a need for tailored policies to support caregivers, especially as the nature of caregiving shifts.

Article Abstract

Objectives: We present a dynamic view of gender patterns in informal caregiving across Europe in a context of sociodemographic transformations. We aim to answer the following research questions: (a) has the gender gap in informal caregiving changed; (b) if so, is this due to changes among women and/or men; and (c) has the gender care gap changed differently across care regimes?

Methods: Multilevel growth curve models are applied to gendered trajectories of informal caregiving of a panel sample of 50+ Europeans, grouped into 5-year cohorts and followed across 5 waves of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe survey, stratified by sex and adjusted for several covariates.

Results: For men in cohorts born more recently, there is a decrease in the prevalence of informal care outside the household, whereas cohort trajectories for women are mostly stable. Prevalence of care inside the household has increased for later-born cohorts for all without discernible changes to the gender care gap. Gender care gaps overall widened among later-born cohorts in the Continental cluster, whereas they remained constant in Southern Europe, and narrowed in the Nordic cluster.

Discussion: We discuss the cohort effects found in the context of gender differences in employment and care around retirement age, as well as possible demographic explanations for these. The shift from care outside to inside the household, where it mostly consists of spousal care, may require different policies to support carers, whose age profile and possible care burden seem to be increasing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10394995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbad011DOI Listing

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