The Sustainability Spillover: Uncovering the Link Between Informal Elder Care and Eco-Conscious Behaviors Across the European Union.

IF 4.9 3区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Innovation in Aging Pub Date : 2024-12-13 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/geroni/igae108
Aviad Tur-Sinai, Netta Bentur, Giovanni Lamura, Ricardo Rodrigues, Mirko Di Rosa, Marco Socci
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and objectives: This study explores the association between informal caregiving for older adults and environmentally sustainable behaviors across the 27 European Union countries, aiming to identify how the gendered and domestic nature of environmentalism relates to senior care.

Research design and methods: Data from 41,742 respondents aged 16-74 were analyzed from the Survey of Gender Gaps in Unpaid Care, Individual and Social Activities, and conducted by a scientific consortium in 2022. Frequency of sustainable behaviors was measured across 10 indicators. Multilevel mixed-effects linear regressions examined associations between caregiving and sustainable behaviors, adjusting for demographic, socioeconomic, and attitudinal covariates.

Results: Informal caregivers engaged in eco-friendly actions significantly more frequently than noncaregivers across all 10 sustainable-behavior indicators (p < 0.001). The "caregiver effect" was strongest for sustainable-consumption choices like buying eco-friendly (β = 0.16), fair-trade (β = 0.15), and used products (β = 0.17), and weaker for household practices such as recycling (β = 0.05) and mindful resource consumption (β = 0.06). Caregivers attained higher composite environmental behavior scores (33.93 ± 8.23) than noncaregivers (31.88 ± 8.00; p < 0.001). This association remained robust after adjusting for gender, age, education, employment, household size, attitudes, and other covariates. Caregiving had the strongest association with buying used items (β = 0.20) and eco-friendly products (β = 0.14). Country-level analyses revealed consistent caregiver versus noncaregiver differences, with the largest gaps in Southern and Eastern Europe.

Discussion and implications: This is the first large-scale cross-national study that demonstrates a consistent association between older-adult caregiving and a wide range of environmentally sustainable behaviors. Results suggest the experience of caring for a vulnerable family member is closely related to a broader sense of social and environmental responsibility. Caregivers' heightened engagement in sustainable consumption positions them as potential early adopters and change makers. Findings highlight new avenues for environmental education and caregiver support initiatives that synergistically promote interpersonal and environmental care.

可持续性溢出效应:揭示欧盟范围内非正式养老与生态意识行为之间的联系。
背景与目的:本研究探讨了27个欧盟国家老年人非正式护理与环境可持续行为之间的关系,旨在确定环境保护主义的性别和家庭性质如何与老年人护理相关。研究设计与方法:分析了一个科学联盟于2022年开展的《无偿护理、个人和社会活动中的性别差距调查》中41742名年龄在16-74岁之间的受访者的数据。可持续行为的频率通过10个指标来衡量。多层混合效应线性回归检验了护理和可持续行为之间的关系,调整了人口统计学、社会经济和态度协变量。结果:在所有10项可持续行为指标中,非正式照顾者比非照顾者更频繁地采取环保行动(p < 0.001)。“照顾者效应”在购买环保产品(β = 0.16)、公平贸易产品(β = 0.15)和二手产品(β = 0.17)等可持续消费选择中最强,而在回收利用产品(β = 0.05)和有意识的资源消耗产品(β = 0.06)等家庭行为中较弱。照顾者的综合环境行为得分(33.93±8.23)高于非照顾者(31.88±8.00);P < 0.001)。在调整了性别、年龄、教育程度、就业、家庭规模、态度和其他协变量后,这种关联仍然很强。护理与购买二手物品(β = 0.20)和环保产品(β = 0.14)的相关性最强。国家层面的分析显示,护理者与非护理者之间存在一致的差异,南欧和东欧的差距最大。讨论和启示:这是第一次大规模的跨国研究,证明了老年人护理与广泛的环境可持续行为之间的一致联系。结果表明,照顾弱势家庭成员的经历与更广泛的社会和环境责任感密切相关。护理人员对可持续消费的高度参与使他们成为潜在的早期采用者和变革者。研究结果强调了环境教育和照顾者支持举措的新途径,这些举措可协同促进人际关系和环境护理。
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来源期刊
Innovation in Aging
Innovation in Aging GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
72
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Innovation in Aging, an interdisciplinary Open Access journal of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), is dedicated to publishing innovative, conceptually robust, and methodologically rigorous research focused on aging and the life course. The journal aims to present studies with the potential to significantly enhance the health, functionality, and overall well-being of older adults by translating scientific insights into practical applications. Research published in the journal spans a variety of settings, including community, clinical, and laboratory contexts, with a clear emphasis on issues that are directly pertinent to aging and the dynamics of life over time. The content of the journal mirrors the diverse research interests of GSA members and encompasses a range of study types. These include the validation of new conceptual or theoretical models, assessments of factors impacting the health and well-being of older adults, evaluations of interventions and policies, the implementation of groundbreaking research methodologies, interdisciplinary research that adapts concepts and methods from other fields to aging studies, and the use of modeling and simulations to understand factors and processes influencing aging outcomes. The journal welcomes contributions from scholars across various disciplines, such as technology, engineering, architecture, economics, business, law, political science, public policy, education, public health, social and psychological sciences, biomedical and health sciences, and the humanities and arts, reflecting a holistic approach to advancing knowledge in gerontology.
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