Abstract :
This study examined whether formal care services delivered to frail older people’s
homes in France and Israel substitute for or complement informal support.
The two countries have comparable family welfare systems but many historical,
cultural and religious differences. Data for the respondents aged 75 or more years
at the first wave of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe
(SHARE) were analysed. Regressions were examined of three patterns of care
from outside the household: informal support only, formal support only and both
formal and informal care, with the predictor variables including whether informal
help was provided by a family member living in the household. The results
revealed that about one-half of the respondents received no help at all (France
51%, Israel 55%), about one-tenth received care from a household member
(France 8%, Israel 10%), and one-third were helped by informal carers from
outside the household (France 34%, Israel 33%).More French respondents (35%)
received formal care services at home than Israelis (27%). Most predictors of
the care patterns were similar in the two countries. The analysis showed that
complementarity is a common outcome of the co-existence of formal and informal
care, and that mixed provision occurs more frequently in situations of greater
need. It is also shown that spouse care-givers had less formal home-care supports
than either co-resident children or other family care-givers. Even so, spouses,
children and other family care-givers all had considerable support from formal
home-delivered care.
Keywords :
aged 75+ years , Formal care , informal care , Substitution , SHARE survey , Complementarity , HOWARD LITWIN