10 research outputs found

    Understanding health trajectories among unpaid carers in the United Kingdom

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    Context: There is very little research on the impact of caring on physical health, and the evidence that exists is mixed. There is also lack of evidence on the role of other factors including both socio-economic factors and the role played by care services and unmet needs for such services. Aims: This study aims to understand the association between physical health outcomes among unpaid carers in the United Kingdom compared to individuals who have not provided unpaid care, and investigate what is the role that time, and unmet needs for care services play in this relationship. Methods: We used four waves of the UK Household Longitudinal Survey, a large representative sample, covering the period 2015 to 2020. We performed Propensity Score Matching to compare health outcomes of carers against non-carers and Latent Class Analysis to identify different typologies of unpaid carers. Results: We found that the relationship between care provision and physical health is complex, that effects on health may differ between the short and medium run, and that deprivation levels and unmet need for services play an important role. Conclusion: This research contributes original insights into our understanding of the impact of different care trajectories on the health of the carer taking into consideration the characteristics of care-recipients, the effect of unmet needs, and external factors. This is crucial both in relation to their ability to provide support and in terms of their own care needs and is therefore of direct relevance to policy and practice to support unpaid carers

    Channels of Social Mobility, Education as a Promoter and Barrier in Chile

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    One of the main concerns and challenges of modern society is the level of equality of opportunity members of populations can enjoy. That becomes particularly important in societies where there is high income inequality. This research investigates the level of education and earnings mobility in Chile, finding relatively low intergenerational schooling dependency, but high in terms of intergenerational earnings compared to other countries.Schooling mobility seems to be lower than earnings mobility, which is opposite to what was expected in Chile. Consideringthis result, this research also analyses the effect of competition between schools on their average academic performance in the context of the Chilean educational reform implemented in the 1980s. In this respect, it is found that a larger number of public schools positively affects the quality of education of other schools located in an area, with the effect particularly pronounced amongst middle-class families and in middle-ranking schools. However, the number of voucher schools decreases the performance of neighbouring schools. The results are confirmed whilst ruling out endogenous location of voucher schools in areas with bad quality public schools, suggesting that sorting of students is driving the results. Finally, considering the possibility that schools might be a segregationalist environment, this investigation analyses the effects of assortative mating on the level of intergenerational earnings dependency in the country. It is found that assortative mating in terms of years of schooling explains around 20% of the intergenerational earnings dependency levels and that the educational reform increased the levels of assortative mating due to potential student sorting and a general increase of the educational attainment of the whole Chilean population

    Early onset of care needs in the older population: the protective role of housing conditions

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    Most older people wish to live in their own homes as they age and to have a choice over their housing and care situation. Housing has the potential to play a key role in promoting independence, delaying and/or preventing the onset of care needs and in influencing the level and type of care provision required. However, many older people live in homes that are not suitable for their comfort and needs. Our study focuses on older people living in non-specialist housing in England and aims to i) explore how housing characteristics cluster; and ii) investigate their association with an early onset of care needs. We used four waves of a large representative longitudinal sample of people aged 50 or over, covering the period 2012 to 2020. We performed Latent Class Analysis and a Cox regression survival model to provide answers to our research questions. We found that people living in poor housing conditions or living in social rented housing are more likely to experience early onset of care needs, which may lead to a higher demand for, and utilisation of, long-term care services. We believe that gaining a better understanding of the relationship between housing-related conditions and care needs is paramount from the preventative and service provision point of view, and is of relevance to policymakers, practitioners, and current and future adult long-term care users

    Projected costs of informal care for older people in England

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    Background Health economics research and economic evaluation have increasingly taken a societal perspective, accounting for the economic impacts of informal care. Projected economic costs of informal care help researchers and policymakers understand better the long-term consequences of policy reforms and health interventions. This study makes projections of the economic costs of informal care for older people in England. Methods Data come from two national surveys: the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA, N = 35,425) and the Health Survey for England (N = 17,292). We combine a Markov model with a macrosimulation model to make the projections. We explore a range of assumptions about future demographic and epidemiological trends to capture model uncertainty and take a Bayesian approach to capture parameter uncertainty. Results We estimate that the economic costs of informal care were £54.2 billion in 2019, three times larger than the expenditure on formal long-term care. Those costs are projected to rise by 87% by 2039, faster than public expenditure but slower than private expenditure on formal long-term care. These results are sensitive to assumptions about future life expectancy, fertility rates, and progression of disabilities in the population. Conclusions Prevention schemes aiming to promote healthy aging and independence will be important to alleviate the costs of informal care. The government should strengthen support for informal caregivers and care recipients to ensure the adequacy of care, protect the well-being of caregivers, and prevent the costs of informal care from spilling over to other sectors of the economy

    The high cost of unpaid care by young people: health and economic impacts of providing unpaid care

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    BACKGROUND: Many countries worldwide have experienced reductions in provision of formal long-term care services amidst rising need for care. Provision of unpaid care, meanwhile, has grown. This includes care provided by young people. Care responsibilities can affect a young people's health, education and employment. We aimed to investigate the impacts on the employment and health of young people aged 16 to 25 of providing care, and the associated individual and public expenditure costs. METHODS: We examined employment, earnings and health impacts for individuals, and a range of economic impacts for society, focusing on young people aged 16 to 25 providing unpaid care in England. We applied regression analysis to data from three waves of the UK Household Longitudinal Study (2013/2015, 2014/2016, and 2015/2017) to compare employment and health outcomes among carers and non-carers, and two-part Generalised Linear Models to estimate costs. To address potential selection bias, we then used propensity score matching methods to explore outcomes for a matched sub-sample of young adult carers who started providing care at baseline (2014/16). RESULTS: Young people aged 16 to 25 who provided care at baseline (2014/16) were less likely to be in employment, had lower earnings from paid employment, and had poorer mental and physical health at follow-up (2015/17) compared to young people of the same age who were not providing care at baseline.. There were substantial costs to the state of young adults providing care from lower tax revenue, welfare benefit payments, and health service use. In aggregate, these costs amounted to £1048 million annually in 2017. CONCLUSIONS: High individual impacts and costs to the state of providing unpaid care, and the potential of such impacts to compound existing inequalities, have many implications for policy and practice in the health, social care, employment and welfare benefits sectors. In particular, the findings reinforce the case for reducing the need for young people to provide unpaid care, for example through better provision of formal care services, and to provide ongoing support for those young people who do provide care. As impacts are seen in a number of domains, support needs to be multidimensional

    Acceptability, engagement and exploratory outcomes and costs of a co-designed intervention to support children of parents with a mental illness: mixed-methods evaluation and descriptive analysis

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    Children whose parents have a mental illness are much more likely to experience mental health problems and other adverse long-term impacts. Child-centred psychosocial interventions can be effective, but not much is known about how to design and implement them in different settings. A pre-post, mixed methods, single-arm evaluation of a co-designed social support intervention with parents and children (4–18 years) measured parents' mental health (PHQ-9), perceived social support (ENRICHD), parental self-efficacy (PSAM) and children's mental health (SDQ), quality of life (Kidscreen-27), and child service use (CAMHSRI-EU) at baseline and 6 months. Qualitative data were gathered at 6 months to explore parents' and children's experience with the intervention. Twenty-nine parents and 21 children completed baseline and follow-up questionnaires; 22 parents and 17 children participated in interviews. Parents' depression (MD −1.36, SD 8.08), perceived social support (MD 1, SD 5.91), and children's mental health potentially improved, and children's service use and costs potentially reduced (€224.6 vs. €122.2, MD 112.4). Parental self-efficacy was potentially reduced (MD −0.11, SD 3.33). The sample was too small to perform statistical analysis. Favourable themes emerged describing the high satisfaction with the intervention, parents' improved understanding of the impact of their mental health problems on children, and improvements in parent–child relationships. This study contributes to an emerging evidence base for co-designed child-centred interventions to prevent the transgenerational transmission of poor mental health
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