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Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales

Christina R. Victor, Christine Dobbs, Kenneth Gilhooly, Vanessa Burholt Orcid Logo

International Journal of Care and Caring, Volume: 3, Issue: 1, Pages: 75 - 96

Swansea University Author: Vanessa Burholt Orcid Logo

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Abstract

We investigated family caring using established questions from national surveys of 1,206 adults aged 40+ from six minority ethnic communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caring (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caring (hea...

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Published in: International Journal of Care and Caring
ISSN: 2397-8821 2397-883X
Published: Bristol University Press 2019
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa64594
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first_indexed 2023-10-20T14:55:14Z
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spelling v2 64594 2023-09-21 Exploring intergenerational, intra-generational and transnational patterns of family caring in minority ethnic communities: the example of England and Wales cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e 0000-0002-6789-127X Vanessa Burholt Vanessa Burholt true false 2023-09-21 PHAC We investigated family caring using established questions from national surveys of 1,206 adults aged 40+ from six minority ethnic communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caring (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caring (health, material resources, education, employment and cultural values). In the general population, 15% of adults are family carers. Three groups reported lower levels of caring (Black African [12%], Chinese [11%] and Black Caribbean [9%]) and three reported higher levels of caring (Indian [23%], Pakistani [17%] and Bangladeshi [18%]). However, ethnicity predicted caring 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 Minority ethnic groups, family caring, intra-generational care, intergenerational care, transnational care 1 2 2019 2019-02-01 10.1332/239788219x15488381886362 http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/239788219x15488381886362 COLLEGE NANME Public Health COLLEGE CODE PHAC Swansea University This work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust (award no. F/00275/Q) and the National Institute of Social Care and Health Research (award no. SCRA/10/02) 2023-10-20T15:55:51.1008727 2023-09-21T22:54:35.2780591 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Public Health Christina R. Victor 1 Christine Dobbs 2 Kenneth Gilhooly 3 Vanessa Burholt 0000-0002-6789-127X 4 64594__28850__d63ebea086824512aed6f8b7eff58c9f.pdf 64594.VOR.pdf 2023-10-20T15:54:23.4052448 Output 173929 application/pdf Version of Record true © Policy Press 2019. Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 4.0 License (CC BY-NC 4.0). true eng https://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
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 cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e
author_id_fullname_str_mv cf7fe9863906cd54df5b0a99904d535e_***_Vanessa Burholt
author 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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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Public Health{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Public Health
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/239788219x15488381886362
document_store_str 1
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description We investigated family caring using established questions from national surveys of 1,206 adults aged 40+ from six minority ethnic communities in England and Wales. We included in our analysis factors that predisposed caring (age, sex, marital status and household composition) and enabled caring (health, material resources, education, employment and cultural values). In the general population, 15% of adults are family carers. Three groups reported lower levels of caring (Black African [12%], Chinese [11%] and Black Caribbean [9%]) and three reported higher levels of caring (Indian [23%], Pakistani [17%] and Bangladeshi [18%]). However, ethnicity predicted caring independent of other factors only for the Indian group.
published_date 2019-02-01T15:55:52Z
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