Archive / Seminari IdEP / IdEP_Seminar_09.02.22
USI - Email
 
 
Università
della
Svizzera
italiana
IdEP
 
 
 
   
  main_banner
 

Can informal care help preserve mental health in nursing homes? Evidence of gender effects

 
 
 

 

Mercoledì

09.02

Online in Zoom and room SI003, Università della Svizzera italiana, Campus Ovest, Lugano
12:30
   
 

https://zoom.us/j/96973372448 Meeting ID: 969 7337 2448 Passcode: 708736

Quitterie Roquebert
Assistant professor at University of Strasbourg and BETA member
Informal care, defined as unpaid care provided by relatives, plays a major role in long-term care provision. While much attention has been paid to informal care provided to older persons in the community, little is known on the role of relatives as caregivers in nursing homes.
Evidence, however, suggest that relatives are still providing concrete care for people living in nursing homes. This paper analyzes the causal effect of informal care provided by children on mental health for individuals living in nursing homes. We take into account gender differences, considering both the gender of caregivers and care recipients. We exploit the cross-sectional French survey Care Institution (2016) which provides a sample of 2,382 individuals representative of the 60+ individuals living in a nursing home and having children. Mental health outcomes are the probability of declaring depression, sleep disorders, poor appetite and feeling of weariness. To deal with the endogeneity of informal care to health variables, we exploit an instrumental variable strategy where the probability of receiving informal care is instrumented by the geographical proximity of children.
Results show that in general, informal care provided by children positively affects women's mental health (poor appetite, weariness) while it has no effect on men. It conceals important effects that appear when taking caregiver gender into account. Care provided by daughters has no effect on mental health while care provided by sons is effective in improving mental health of both women (poor appetite) and men (weariness). Public policies should take into account the role played by relatives in nursing homes and pay attention to the gender gap in longterm care provision.