A cohort study of the effects of older adult care dependence upon household economic functioning, in Peru, Mexico and China.
Maëlenn M GuerchetMariella GuerraYueqin HuangPeter Lloyd-SherlockAna Luisa SosaRichard UwakweIsaac AcostaPeter EzeahSara GallardoZhaorui LiuRosie MaystonVeronica Montes de OcaHong WangMartin James PrincePublished in: PloS one (2018)
While endogeneity cannot be confidently excluded as an explanation for the findings, this study indicates that older people's needs for care have a discernable impact on household economics, controlling for baseline indicators of long-term economic status. Although living, typically, in multigenerational family units, older people have not featured prominently in global health and development agendas. Population ageing will rapidly increase the number of households where older people live, and their societal significance. Building sustainable long-term care systems for the future will require some combination of improved income security in old age; incentivisation of informal care through compensation for direct and opportunity costs; and development of community care services to support, and, where necessary, supplement or substitute the central role of informal caregivers.