Daughters of elderly women are more likely to provide informal care than sons. If care managers take this into account and view informal care as a substitute for formal care, they will statistically discriminate against the mothers of daughters. Using a survey experiment among professional needs assessors for long-term care services in Norway, we find that if a woman with a daughter had a son instead, she would receive 34 percent more formal care. On the other hand, daughters do not provide more care for fathers. Correspondingly, we find no effect of child gender for fathers in the experiment
The purpose of this study was to understand, by means of Connell’s and Hirdman’s gender theories, wh...
Numerous studies have attempted to identify predictors of institutionalization in the general popula...
Background: Stigma and informal caregiving are determinants for health and wellbeing, but few studie...
Daughters of elderly women are more likely to provide informal care than sons. If care managers take...
Daughters of elderly women are more likely to provide informal care than sons. If care managers take...
This oral presentation deals with the question of the relative contribution of children to the infor...
We study long-term care (LTC) choices by families with mixed- or same-gender siblings. LTC can be pr...
When facing dependency, the majority of elderly men receive care from spouses whereas elderly women ...
textabstractThis study investigates how (a) the reliance on public care and (b) the type of public c...
The aim of this paper is to disentangle the role of gender and partnership status in the caring comm...
This study investigates how (a) the reliance on public care and (b) the type of public care received...
Care for the elderly population in the United States is fast becoming an issue many families are fac...
We weave together care-giving, gender, and migration. We hypothesize that daughters who are mothers ...
Daughters are the principal caregivers of their dependent parents. In this paper, we study long-term...
Intergenerational family care provided to older parents by adult children is growing and differs bas...
The purpose of this study was to understand, by means of Connell’s and Hirdman’s gender theories, wh...
Numerous studies have attempted to identify predictors of institutionalization in the general popula...
Background: Stigma and informal caregiving are determinants for health and wellbeing, but few studie...
Daughters of elderly women are more likely to provide informal care than sons. If care managers take...
Daughters of elderly women are more likely to provide informal care than sons. If care managers take...
This oral presentation deals with the question of the relative contribution of children to the infor...
We study long-term care (LTC) choices by families with mixed- or same-gender siblings. LTC can be pr...
When facing dependency, the majority of elderly men receive care from spouses whereas elderly women ...
textabstractThis study investigates how (a) the reliance on public care and (b) the type of public c...
The aim of this paper is to disentangle the role of gender and partnership status in the caring comm...
This study investigates how (a) the reliance on public care and (b) the type of public care received...
Care for the elderly population in the United States is fast becoming an issue many families are fac...
We weave together care-giving, gender, and migration. We hypothesize that daughters who are mothers ...
Daughters are the principal caregivers of their dependent parents. In this paper, we study long-term...
Intergenerational family care provided to older parents by adult children is growing and differs bas...
The purpose of this study was to understand, by means of Connell’s and Hirdman’s gender theories, wh...
Numerous studies have attempted to identify predictors of institutionalization in the general popula...
Background: Stigma and informal caregiving are determinants for health and wellbeing, but few studie...