Literature DB >> 27840453

Liminal and invisible long-term care labour: Precarity in the face of austerity.

Tamara Daly1, Pat Armstrong1.   

Abstract

Using feminist political economy, this article argues that companions hired privately by families to care for residents in publicly funded long-term care facilities (nursing homes) are a liminal and invisible labour force. A care gap, created by public sector austerity, has resulted in insufficient staff to meet residents' health and social care needs. Families pay to fill this care gap in public funding with companion care, which limits demands on the state to collectively bear the costs of care for older adults. We assess companions' work in light of Vosko's (2015) and Rodgers and Rodgers' (1989) dimensions for precariousness. We discuss how to classify paid care work that overlaps with paid formal and unpaid informal care. Our findings illuminate how companions' labour is simultaneously autonomous and precarious; it fills a care gap and creates one, and can be relational compared with staffs' task-oriented work.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Austerity; care work; gender; liminality; long-term care; nursing homes; precarious work

Year:  2016        PMID: 27840453      PMCID: PMC5102694          DOI: 10.1177/0022185616643496

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Ind Relat        ISSN: 0022-1856


  6 in total

1.  Experts recommend minimum nurse staffing standards for nursing facilities in the United States.

Authors:  C Harrington; C Kovner; M Mezey; J Kayser-Jones; S Burger; M Mohler; R Burke; D Zimmerman
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  2000-02

2.  Associations between contractual status, part-time work, and intent to leave among professional caregivers for older people: results of a national cross-sectional survey in Japan.

Authors:  Yuko Kachi; Kazuo Inoue; Satoshi Toyokawa
Journal:  Int J Nurs Stud       Date:  2010-02-21       Impact factor: 5.837

3.  Structural violence in long-term, residential care for older people: comparing Canada and Scandinavia.

Authors:  Albert Banerjee; Tamara Daly; Pat Armstrong; Marta Szebehely; Hugh Armstrong; Stirling Lafrance
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2011-12-07       Impact factor: 4.634

4.  Unheard voices, unmapped terrain: care work in long-term residential care for older people in Canada and Sweden.

Authors:  Tamara Daly; Marta Szebehely
Journal:  Int J Soc Welf       Date:  2012-04

5.  Lifting the 'violence veil': examining working conditions in long-term care facilities using iterative mixed methods.

Authors:  Tamara Daly; Albert Banerjee; Pat Armstrong; Hugh Armstrong; Marta Szebehely
Journal:  Can J Aging       Date:  2011-06

6.  Liminality in Ontario's long-term care facilities: Private companions' care work in the space 'betwixt and between'.

Authors:  Tamara Daly; Pat Armstrong; Ruth Lowndes
Journal:  Compet Change       Date:  2016-06-01
  6 in total
  1 in total

1.  Experiences of moral distress by privately hired companions in Ontario's long-term care facilities.

Authors:  Julia Brassolotto; Tamara Daly; Pat Armstrong; Vishaya Naidoo
Journal:  Qual Ageing Older Adults       Date:  2017
  1 in total

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