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Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales
International Journal of Care and Caring, Volume: 3, Issue: 1, Pages: 75 - 96
Swansea University Authors: Christine Dobbs, Vanessa Burholt
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DOI (Published version): 10.1332/239788219x15488381886362
Abstract
We investigated family caregiving, using established questions from national surveys, for 1206 adults aged 40+ for six minority communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caregiving (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caregivin...
Published in: | International Journal of Care and Caring |
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ISSN: | 2397-8821 2397-883X |
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Bristol University Press
2019
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa49008 |
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2022-12-09T16:10:45.8722594 v2 49008 2019-02-27 Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales 937b7a89ff111abd197e192a6a850f22 Christine Dobbs Christine Dobbs true false cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e 0000-0002-6789-127X Vanessa Burholt Vanessa Burholt true false 2019-02-27 FGMHL We investigated family caregiving, using established questions from national surveys, for 1206 adults aged 40+ for six minority communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caregiving (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caregiving (health, material resources, education, employment and cultural values). 15% of adults in the general population are family caregivers: three groups reported lower levels of caring (12%-Black African; 11% -Chinese; 9% Black Caribbean) and three higher (23% Indian, 17% Pakistani and 18% Bangladeshi). Ethnicity predicted caregiving independent of other factors only for the Indian group. Journal Article International Journal of Care and Caring 3 1 75 96 Bristol University Press 2397-8821 2397-883X ethnic minority; family caring; intra-generational care, inter-generational care, transnational care 1 2 2019 2019-02-01 10.1332/239788219x15488381886362 COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2022-12-09T16:10:45.8722594 2019-02-27T17:42:02.1114264 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences The Centre for Innovative Ageing Christina R. Victor 1 Christine Dobbs 2 Kenneth Gilhooly 3 Vanessa Burholt 0000-0002-6789-127X 4 0049008-18072019084507.pdf Exploringintergenerationalintragenerationaandtrannationalpattersoffamilycaringinminorityethniccommunities(offprint).pdf 2019-07-18T08:45:07.2730000 Output 168356 application/pdf Version of Record true This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial 4.0 license true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ |
title |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
spellingShingle |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales Christine Dobbs Vanessa Burholt |
title_short |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
title_full |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
title_fullStr |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
title_full_unstemmed |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
title_sort |
Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales |
author_id_str_mv |
937b7a89ff111abd197e192a6a850f22 cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
937b7a89ff111abd197e192a6a850f22_***_Christine Dobbs cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e_***_Vanessa Burholt |
author |
Christine Dobbs Vanessa Burholt |
author2 |
Christina R. Victor Christine Dobbs Kenneth Gilhooly Vanessa Burholt |
format |
Journal article |
container_title |
International Journal of Care and Caring |
container_volume |
3 |
container_issue |
1 |
container_start_page |
75 |
publishDate |
2019 |
institution |
Swansea University |
issn |
2397-8821 2397-883X |
doi_str_mv |
10.1332/239788219x15488381886362 |
publisher |
Bristol University Press |
college_str |
Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences |
hierarchy_parent_title |
Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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The Centre for Innovative Ageing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}The Centre for Innovative Ageing |
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description |
We investigated family caregiving, using established questions from national surveys, for 1206 adults aged 40+ for six minority communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caregiving (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caregiving (health, material resources, education, employment and cultural values). 15% of adults in the general population are family caregivers: three groups reported lower levels of caring (12%-Black African; 11% -Chinese; 9% Black Caribbean) and three higher (23% Indian, 17% Pakistani and 18% Bangladeshi). Ethnicity predicted caregiving independent of other factors only for the Indian group. |
published_date |
2019-02-01T03:59:45Z |
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1763753050836566016 |
score |
11.037603 |