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From Child Care to Elder Care
Leigh Rhonda Tooth
Julie E. Byles
Hsiu-Wen Chan
Joanne Coombe
Annette J. Dobson
Richard Hockey
Deborah Loxton
Gita Mishra
Natalie Townsend
其他書名
Findings from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health : Final Report Prepared for the Australian Government Department of Health
出版
Women's Health Australia
, 2018
ISBN
1760074578
9781760074579
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=l-c_zwEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
"The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) is a longitudinal population-based survey examining the health of over 58,000 Australian women. The study comprises four cohorts of women: three cohorts (born in 1921-26, 1946-51, 1973-78) have been repeatedly surveyed since 1996, and a new cohort (born in 1989-95) was first surveyed in 2013. The ALSWH data have been widely used to assess health status of women in Australia and to investigate the behavioural and socio-demographic characteristics that affect health and the use of health services at different life stages. This major report, the latest in a series for the Department of Health, examinesinformal caregiving across the life course. The provision of informal care (that is, unpaid care) to another person is an important and often significant part of women's lives. Statistics from Australia and countries across the OECD show that over two-thirds of primary caregivers, and over half of all caregivers, are women. In Australia, the economic value of informal care in 2015 was estimated to be over $1 billion per week. For many women, caregiving roles and responsibilities occur at multiple points along the life course, with these life course variations largely driven by relationships between and within generations. For example, women may care for their own children and grandchildren, care for parents, other family members or friends, and in later decades, care for spouses or partners. Women can provide primary, often higher intensity, care for people living with them or secondary, often lower intensity, care for people living elsewhere. Women often transition in and out of caregiving roles while managing other responsibilities, for example, employment and family life. This report presents an analysis of the patterns of caregiving by Australian women across the life course using data from women aged from 18 to 97 years, the socio-demographic factors associated with caregiving patterns, and the impact of caregiving on social, employment and health outcomes of caregivers including their health service use."--Executive summary.