Determinants of Trajectories of Informal Caregiving in later life. Evidence from England
Giorgio Di Gessa, Christian Deindl

TL;DR
This study explores how older people in England provide informal care over time and finds that family characteristics are the main drivers of caregiving patterns.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct caregiving trajectories and highlights the role of family dynamics in shaping these patterns.
Findings
Four caregiving trajectories were identified: stable intensive, increasing intensive, decreasing, and stable no care.
Family characteristics, such as living alone or having older parents, strongly influence caregiving patterns.
Changes in family circumstances, like the death of a parent, affect caregiving intensity over time.
Abstract
Although long-term consequences of informal care provision are well investigated, fewer studies have examined trajectories of informal care provision among older people and the socioeconomic, demographic, health, and family characteristics associated with them. We use data from four waves of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, with 6,561 respondents followed for 6 years (2012/3 to 2018/9). We used group-based trajectory modelling to group people's provision of care over time into a finite number of distinct trajectories of caregiving. Using multinomial logistic regressions, we then investigated characteristics associated with these trajectories. Four distinct trajectories were identified representing “stable intensive”, “increasing intensive”, “decreasing”, and “stable no care”. Results suggest that, although there are socioeconomic, demographic, and health differences across the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies · Health disparities and outcomes
