Abstract :
Payments for care, by which people in need of long-termcare directly employ care
workers, have been introduced in many European countries. In The Netherlands,
care dependants are allowed to use these payments to hire relatives to perform
care tasks. Care-givers who are employed by their relatives are in a hybrid
position, because they are contracted as employees in the informal setting of a
family home and its affective care relationships. This paper reports a qualitative
study of relatives’ experiences of payments for care and how these affect
their care-giving. In-depth interviews were undertaken with 17 paid carers :
they were asked to respond to three fictional vignettes of contrasting care
trajectories. It was found that the cash nexus had mixed and partly contradictory
implications for the paid care-givers. On the one hand, the care-givers were
satisfied with the arrangement, as the payments recognised and raised their
status as carers, and were seen as reward and reciprocation for their care
work. Some carers had found that the contract helped manage strained relationships,
by enabling a clearer differentiation of care tasks from affection.
On the other hand, some who regarded themselves as employees and saw their
role as equivalent to formal carers felt a greater obligation to provide high-quality
care, and found that they were thanked less often and received fewer tokens of
gratitude.
Keywords :
TRUDIE KNIJN , payments for care , intergenerational relations , Family care , the Netherlands