Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.3935/rsp.v26i2.1604
Long-Term Care Determinants of Care Arrangements for Older People in Europe: Evidence from SHARE
Valentina Hlebec
; Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana
Andrej Srakar
orcid.org/0000-0001-7296-6275
; Institute for Economic Research
Boris Majcen
; Institute for Economic Research
Abstract
European countries differ greatly in the proportions of people who receive various types of care. They also differ considerably regarding the societal characteristics of care such as the availability of formal care within the country. We explored the explanatory potential of contextual characteristics of the provision of formal home care, and barriers to using long-term care services for older people’s care arrangements across Europe. We employed data from Wave 5 of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, and analyze the data using a multinomial logistic model. Less involvement and lower national governance in the integration of home care policy decreases the use of formal care alone, and in combination with informal care. Higher integration and coordination in delivering home-care services increases the use of formal services. In countries with higher shares of reported barriers to using their longterm care systems there is a smaller probability of formal services being used.
Keywords
aging in place; informal care; formal care; combined care; care context
Hrčak ID:
223865
URI
Publication date:
23.7.2019.
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