Title of article :
Couples’ provision of informal care for parents and parents-in-law : far from sharing equally ?
Author/Authors :
HENZ، URSULA نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
This study examines whether and how couples share the provision of informal
care for their parents. Four waves of the British General Household Survey
contain cross-sectional information about caring for parents and parents-in-law.
Descriptive and multivariate analyses were conducted on 2214 couples that provided
parent care. The findings emphasise married men’s contribution to informal
caring for the parental generation and at the same time demonstrate the
limits of their involvement. Spouses share many parts of their care-giving but this
arrangement is less common with respect to personal and physical care. The
more care is required the more likely are people to participate in care for their
parents-in-law. More sons-in-law than daughters-in-law provide care but, once
involved, daughters-in-law provide on average more hours of care than sons-inlaw.
Own full-time employment reduces both men’s and women’s caring for their
parents-in-law, and men’s caring drops further if their wife is not in the labour
market. The findings suggest that daughters-in-law often take direct responsibility
whereas sons-in-laws’ care-giving depends more on their wives’ involvement.
Children-in-laws’ informal care-giving might decrease in the future because of
women’s increasing involvement in the labour market and rising levels of nonmarital
cohabitation in mid-life.
Keywords :
Employment , URSULA HENZ , filial responsibility , Support , secondary carers , GENDER , informal caring , inter generational , parents-in-law
Journal title :
Ageing and Society
Journal title :
Ageing and Society