655 research outputs found

    Time-Bound Opportunity Costs of Informal Care: Consequences for Access to Professional Care, Caregiver Support, and Labour Supply Estimates

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    Patterns of informal care are documented throughout the day with Dutch time use diary data. The diary data enable us to identify a, so far overlooked, source of opportunity costs of informal care, i.e. the necessity to perform particular tasks of informal care at specific moments of the day. Some care tasks are relatively unshiftable, while other tasks are shiftable implying that they can be performed at other moments of the day or even on different days. In particular, household and organization activities seem to be shiftable for employed caregivers, while personal care seems to contain unshiftable activities. This implies an additional opportunity cost of providing personal care tasks. As the care recipient’s need for care may be related to the possibility to shift informal care throughout the day, we conclude that one should be careful with using care need as an instrument of informal care in labour supply equations.joint production, informal care, paid work, opportunity cost, use of time, labor supply

    Long-term care insurance in the Netherlands

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    The Netherlands was the first country to introduce a universal mandatory social health insurance scheme (AWBZ) for covering a broad range of long-term care (LTC) services provided in a variety of care settings. Compared with most other Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries, coverage of LTC services is relatively comprehensive. This comprehensive coverage might explain why, in comparison with most other OECD countries, both total and public expenditure on LTC in the Netherlands are high, particularly since the percentage of elderly is similar to the OECD average (OECD, 2005). This can at least partly be explained by the relatively generous social health insurance scheme.</p

    Informal care: an economic approach

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    In the 1970s and 1980s health care expenditures increased excessively, both in absolute numbers and as a share of the gross domestic product (GDP). Table 1.1 shows the total expenditures on health care as percentage of the GDP in thirteen OECD countries

    Mantelzorg in Nederland

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    Mantelzorg is een belangrijke vorm van zorg. Nederland telt circa 1,5 miljoen mantelzorgers. De Erasmus Universiteit heeft samen met het Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu en de Steunpunten Mantelzorg een onderzoek naar mantelzorg uitgevoerd. In totaal werkten 950 mantelzorgers en 552 zorgvragers mee aan dit onderzoek. Een mantelzorger is vaak een gehuwde vrouw, en zorgt meestal thuis voor een familielid. Een aanzienlijk deel heeft thuiswonende kinderen. De meeste mantelzorgers zijn gepensioneerd of huisvrouw/-man. De zorgvragers zijn meestal ouder dan 60 jaar en gehuwd, één op de vijf is weduwe of weduwnaar. Ongeveer de helft van de zorgvragers is met pensioen, één op de vier is arbeidsongeschikt. Zorgvragers zijn als gevolg van hun gebrekkige gezondheid beperkt in hun activiteit en hebben dus ondersteuning nodig. Hiervoor zijn ze afhankelijk van mantelzorgers, thuiszorg en particuliere hulp. Ruim één op de drie zorgvragers is volledig afhankelijk van mantelzorg, en ongeveer één op de vijf zelfs va

    Een situatieschets van mantelzorgers bereikt via leden van de vereniging van budgethouders Per Saldo

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    Een persoonsgebonden budget (PgB) is een som geld waarmee mensen die hulp en begeleiding nodig hebben als gevolg van een aandoening, deze zorg naar eigen inzicht kunnen inkopen. Het PgB wordt gezien als een belangrijk instrument om verder vorm te geven aan vraagsturing in de Nederlandse gezondheidszorg. Momenteel hebben ruim 35.000 mensen een PgB. Over mensen met een PgB, budgethouders, en hun mantelzorgers is tot op heden echter weinig bekend. Daarom heeft de Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, in samenwerking met het Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu en de vereniging van budgethouders Per Saldo, een onderzoek onder budgethouders en hun mantelzorgers uitgevoerd. Dit is het eerste onderzoek in Nederland van deze omvang onder budgethouders, hun primaire mantelzorger en het gebruik van het PgB in verschillende zorgsituaties. In totaal werkten 609 budgethouders en 522 mantelzorgers verspreid over het hele land mee aan dit onderzoek, dat werd uitgevoerd tussen december 2001 en februari 2002. Twee op de drie budget

    Informal care in the Netherlands. A situational sketch of informal caregivers reached via Informal Care Centres

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    Informal care is a very important form of care. There are approximately 1.5 million informal caregivers in the Netherlands. Despite this large number, little is known about those providing this important service. To address this lack of knowledge, Erasmus University Rotterdam, in collaboration with the National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) and the regional Informal Care Centres, carried out a study of informal care in the Netherlands. This is the first study of any size in the Netherlands to survey both the providers and recipients of informal care. A total of 950 informal caregivers took part in the study, which was carried out between November 2001 and February 2002. This report presents some first results

    The contributions of family care-givers at end of life: A national post-bereavement census survey of cancer carers' hours of care and expenditures.

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    BACKGROUND: Family members provide vital care at end of life, enabling patients to remain at home. Such informal care contributes significantly to the economy while supporting patients' preferences and government policy. However, the value of care-givers' contributions is often underestimated or overlooked in evaluations. Without information on the activities and expenditures involved in informal care-giving, it is impossible to provide an accurate assessment of carers' contribution to end-of-life care. AIM: The aim of this study was to investigate the contributions and expenditure of informal, family care-giving in end-of-life cancer care. DESIGN: A national census survey of English cancer carers was conducted. Survey packs were mailed to 5271 people who registered the death of a relative to cancer during 1-16 May 2015. Data were collected on decedents' health and situation, care support given, financial expenditure resulting from care, carer well-being and general background information. RESULTS: In all, 1504 completed surveys were returned (28.5%). Over 90% of respondents reported spending time on care-giving in the last 3 months of the decedent's life, contributing a median 69 h 30 min of care-giving each week. Those who reported details of expenditure (72.5%) spent a median £370 in the last 3 months of the decedent's life. CONCLUSION: Carers contribute a great deal of time and money for day-to-day support and care of patients. This study has yielded a unique, population-level data set of end-of-life care-giving and future analyses will provide estimates of the economic value of family care-givers' contributions
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