The impact of different care dependencies on people's willingness to provide informal care: a discrete choice experiment in Germany.
Lea de JongTorben SchmidtAnn-Katrin CarstensKathrin DammPublished in: Health economics review (2023)
Our study results show the impact of different factors on the willingness to provide informal care to a close relative. How far the preference weights as well as the high willingness-to-accept values for an hour of caregiving can be explained by the sociodemographic structure of our cohort needs to be investigated by further research. Participants slightly preferred caring for a close relative with cognitive impairments, which might be explained by fear or discomfort with providing personal care to a relative with physical impairments or feelings of sympathy and pity towards people with dementia. Future qualitative research designs can help understand these motivations.