Differences in care use between men and women: The role of publicly financed and informal care at home
Abstract
Although most recipients of long-term care are women, due to rising life expectancy among men, future users of care are increasingly likely to be men. There are indications that gender is an important factor in the way in which a country organizes its care, and that social policy can have diverging outcomes on the average health of men and women. Nevertheless, gender differences in the use of care are seldom considered. Research into possible explanations for these differences has focused mainly on differences between individual characteristics of men and women. In addition, this study examines the effect of public spending on professional home care and the average availability of informal care by over-50s on the actual use of care. Data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement 2004, 2007, and 2013 from eight European countries were used, in combination with OECD data on public spending on professional home care. A multinomial regression with fixed effects was estimated for the correlation between these macro characteristics and individual use of care for men and women separately. Findings show that higher public expenditure on home care is associated with less use of paid care, but also that this is particularly the case among men (“paid care” includes care paid for by the user himself or herself). More plentiful informal care is associated with lower use of paid care, in both men and women. One of the possible implications for future policy on long-term care is that men are relatively more likely to respond to changes in the availability of home care than women and that this responsiveness will become even more marked as the proportion of men using care rises.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
-
Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Debbie Verbeek-oudıjk
*
This is me
0000-0001-6622-307X
The Netherlands
Alice De Boer
This is me
0000-0001-6881-3559
The Netherlands
İsolde Woıttıez
This is me
0000-0002-2093-0374
The Netherlands
Publication Date
August 31, 2019
Submission Date
October 16, 2018
Acceptance Date
August 11, 2019
Published in Issue
Year 2019 Volume: 2 Number: 2
