TY - UNPB
T1 - The role of work in caregiving experiences among older, working caregivers
AU - Grünwald, Olga
AU - Damman, M.
AU - Henkens, K.
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Project: The causes and consequences of retirement: a sociological perspective.Objectives. With an increasing retirement age, more older adults are combining employment with informal caregiving responsibilities. However, little is known about how older workers experience caregiving activities next to their paid jobs. This study aims to fill this gap by examining how the work situation (i.e., working hours, occupational status, and perceived access to human resources practices) is associated with both positive and negative experiences ofcaregiving.Methods. Using data from the NIDI Pension Panel Survey, we study caregiving experiences – in other words, the extent to which caregiving activities are satisfactory, burdensome, or stressful – of 1,651 Dutch older workers (age 60-65) who provide care at least once per week.Results. Multivariate analyses reveal that the work situation plays an explanatory role above and beyond sociodemographic factors and indicators of the caregiving situation. Working caregivers who feel they have access to phased retirement and organizational health support experience caregiving as relatively less burdensome and stressful. Moreover, those with access to phased retirement experience relatively higher levels of satisfaction with caregiving.Discussion. Our findings suggest that offering control over the availability of personal resources such as time and energy to older workers relates to lower levels of caregiving burden and stress, and may make combining work and caregiving obligations easier in a context of longer working lives.
AB - Project: The causes and consequences of retirement: a sociological perspective.Objectives. With an increasing retirement age, more older adults are combining employment with informal caregiving responsibilities. However, little is known about how older workers experience caregiving activities next to their paid jobs. This study aims to fill this gap by examining how the work situation (i.e., working hours, occupational status, and perceived access to human resources practices) is associated with both positive and negative experiences ofcaregiving.Methods. Using data from the NIDI Pension Panel Survey, we study caregiving experiences – in other words, the extent to which caregiving activities are satisfactory, burdensome, or stressful – of 1,651 Dutch older workers (age 60-65) who provide care at least once per week.Results. Multivariate analyses reveal that the work situation plays an explanatory role above and beyond sociodemographic factors and indicators of the caregiving situation. Working caregivers who feel they have access to phased retirement and organizational health support experience caregiving as relatively less burdensome and stressful. Moreover, those with access to phased retirement experience relatively higher levels of satisfaction with caregiving.Discussion. Our findings suggest that offering control over the availability of personal resources such as time and energy to older workers relates to lower levels of caregiving burden and stress, and may make combining work and caregiving obligations easier in a context of longer working lives.
KW - caregivers
M3 - Working paper/Discussion paper
T3 - Netspar Discussion Papers
BT - The role of work in caregiving experiences among older, working caregivers
PB - Network for Studies on Pensions, Aging and Retirement (NETSPAR)
ER -