Abstract Population aging and changing family patterns have made elder care an important issue. In 1994, German lawmakers enacted a major reform in the country's long-term care policy, the Dependency Insurance Act (DIA). How, and in what way, will the relative use of formal and informal long-term care services change in response? We address this question using longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) to examine the mix of care providers used by older Germans prior to enactment. We find that formal care is more likely to be used by those in the poorest health, the single, or the childless. The presence of daughters increases both the use of family and formal care sources. Future work with more recent waves of the GSOEP ...
Introduction: In Germany, the number of elderly people in need of care is expected to increase from ...
Gender disparities in German home-care arrangements An ageing population correlates with rising nee...
Growing long-term care (LTC) needs represent a major challenge for our aging societies. Understandin...
Abstract Population aging and changing family patterns have made elder care an important issue. In 1...
Background: Societies around the world face the burden of an aging population with a high prevalence...
Abstract Background Societies around the world face the burden of an aging population with a high pr...
International differences in long-term care (LTC) use are well documented, but not well understood. ...
The prevalence of ageing population and growing old-age consumption per capita has raised concern ab...
In this paper, we study how elderly individuals adjust their informal long-term care utilization to ...
The establishment of Long-term Care Insurance (LTCI) in Germany in 1995/96 significantly restructure...
This contribution reconstructs the policy shift from a Bismarckian “low road” to a “higher road” of ...
This paper examines the use of transnational arrangements for long-term care for older persons in Ge...
Demographic change in Germany will lead to a higher number of people in need of long-term care and a...
Is the increase in the share of the older population in Germany inevitably connected with a paralle...
Objectives In Germany, roughly 8.3 million people are in need of care, but only one-third of them r...
Introduction: In Germany, the number of elderly people in need of care is expected to increase from ...
Gender disparities in German home-care arrangements An ageing population correlates with rising nee...
Growing long-term care (LTC) needs represent a major challenge for our aging societies. Understandin...
Abstract Population aging and changing family patterns have made elder care an important issue. In 1...
Background: Societies around the world face the burden of an aging population with a high prevalence...
Abstract Background Societies around the world face the burden of an aging population with a high pr...
International differences in long-term care (LTC) use are well documented, but not well understood. ...
The prevalence of ageing population and growing old-age consumption per capita has raised concern ab...
In this paper, we study how elderly individuals adjust their informal long-term care utilization to ...
The establishment of Long-term Care Insurance (LTCI) in Germany in 1995/96 significantly restructure...
This contribution reconstructs the policy shift from a Bismarckian “low road” to a “higher road” of ...
This paper examines the use of transnational arrangements for long-term care for older persons in Ge...
Demographic change in Germany will lead to a higher number of people in need of long-term care and a...
Is the increase in the share of the older population in Germany inevitably connected with a paralle...
Objectives In Germany, roughly 8.3 million people are in need of care, but only one-third of them r...
Introduction: In Germany, the number of elderly people in need of care is expected to increase from ...
Gender disparities in German home-care arrangements An ageing population correlates with rising nee...
Growing long-term care (LTC) needs represent a major challenge for our aging societies. Understandin...