{"title":"书评:谁在乎?吸引及留住长者护理员","authors":"S. Bach","doi":"10.1177/10242589221099980","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This study was prepared and published at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and its themes have become all too familiar over the past 18 months. Elderly care and its workforce have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Workers in the sector have faced terrible circumstances and many elderly people and their carers have lost their lives prematurely. The pandemic has confirmed the fragility and structural problems in the provision of long-term care around the world and exacerbated the recruitment and retention challenges that are the focus of this study. At the same time, the pandemic has focused more public attention on those who provide care, bringing a previously invisible low status workforce into the limelight. This has generated an EU commitment to a new European Care Strategy and prompted many reports looking at the employment and working conditions in long-term care. Nevertheless, the challenges facing the sector remain acute (European Commission, 2021; Kessler et al., 2020). The study looks at the evidence base and considers best practices for stemming the crisis in long-term care. It draws on survey responses and interviews with country delegates, supplemented by national data, EU Labour Force Survey data and additional literature. It considers the situation of long-term carers for the elderly who provide their services to recipients at home or in institutions. These carers comprise two main occupations, nurses and personal care workers. In OECD countries over 70 per cent of long-term care workers are personal carers. In a context of rising demand for care and the shift of care from hospital to community settings, care demand is outstripping the supply of long-term care workers, and workforce shortages will worsen without urgent action. In the aggregate, OECD countries need to more than double the current number of longterm care workers to maintain existing ratios of caregivers to the elderly. These structural challenges stem from insufficient recruitment and retention, connected to low status, poor pay and working conditions, inadequate training and limited attention to skill acquisition and deployment. Staff shortages have a severe impact on quality of care, including unmet care needs and unnecessary hospital admissions. The study details the main characteristics of the workforce, which comprises predominantly middle-aged women, with a high share of foreign-born workers. Foreign-born workers make a vital contribution and represent over 20 per cent of the OECD countries’ long-term care workforce. They are overrepresented in the care sector and are susceptible to exploitation, for many reasons. These include their employment and immigration status, for example, as undeclared workers hired privately by households and because compliance with employment regulations, such as minimum wage provisions, is uneven. Part-time working, often on an involuntary basis, is also significant. 109998010999801099980 TRS0010.1177/10242589221099980TransferBook Reviews book-review2022","PeriodicalId":23253,"journal":{"name":"Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research","volume":"20 1","pages":"147 - 149"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Book Review: Who Cares? Attracting and Retaining Care Workers for the Elderly\",\"authors\":\"S. 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Nevertheless, the challenges facing the sector remain acute (European Commission, 2021; Kessler et al., 2020). The study looks at the evidence base and considers best practices for stemming the crisis in long-term care. It draws on survey responses and interviews with country delegates, supplemented by national data, EU Labour Force Survey data and additional literature. It considers the situation of long-term carers for the elderly who provide their services to recipients at home or in institutions. These carers comprise two main occupations, nurses and personal care workers. In OECD countries over 70 per cent of long-term care workers are personal carers. In a context of rising demand for care and the shift of care from hospital to community settings, care demand is outstripping the supply of long-term care workers, and workforce shortages will worsen without urgent action. In the aggregate, OECD countries need to more than double the current number of longterm care workers to maintain existing ratios of caregivers to the elderly. These structural challenges stem from insufficient recruitment and retention, connected to low status, poor pay and working conditions, inadequate training and limited attention to skill acquisition and deployment. Staff shortages have a severe impact on quality of care, including unmet care needs and unnecessary hospital admissions. The study details the main characteristics of the workforce, which comprises predominantly middle-aged women, with a high share of foreign-born workers. Foreign-born workers make a vital contribution and represent over 20 per cent of the OECD countries’ long-term care workforce. They are overrepresented in the care sector and are susceptible to exploitation, for many reasons. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
这项研究是在COVID-19大流行开始时编写和发表的,其主题在过去18个月里变得再熟悉不过了。老年人护理及其工作人员受到大流行的影响尤为严重。该部门的工人面临着可怕的环境,许多老年人和他们的照顾者过早地失去了生命。大流行证实了世界各地长期护理服务的脆弱性和结构性问题,并加剧了作为本研究重点的招聘和留住挑战。与此同时,大流行使公众更加关注提供护理的人员,使以前不可见的低地位劳动力成为人们关注的焦点。这促成了欧盟对一项新的欧洲护理战略的承诺,并促使许多报告着眼于长期护理的就业和工作条件。然而,该行业面临的挑战仍然严峻(欧盟委员会,2021年;Kessler et al., 2020)。这项研究着眼于证据基础,并考虑了遏制长期护理危机的最佳做法。它借鉴了调查答复和对国家代表的访谈,并辅以国家数据、欧盟劳动力调查数据和其他文献。它考虑到在家中或机构为接受服务的老人提供服务的长期照顾者的情况。这些护理人员包括两个主要职业,护士和个人护理工作者。在经合发组织国家,70%以上的长期护理工作者是个人护理人员。在护理需求不断增加和护理从医院向社区转移的背景下,护理需求超过了长期护理工作者的供应,如果不采取紧急行动,劳动力短缺将会恶化。总的来说,经合组织国家需要将目前的长期护理人员数量增加一倍以上,以维持护理人员与老年人的现有比例。这些结构性挑战源于招聘和保留不足,与低地位、低薪酬和工作条件、培训不足以及对技能获取和部署的关注有限有关。工作人员短缺严重影响到护理质量,包括未满足的护理需求和不必要的住院。该研究详细介绍了劳动力的主要特征,其中主要由中年妇女组成,外国出生的工人占很大比例。外国出生的工人做出了至关重要的贡献,占经合组织国家长期护理劳动力的20%以上。由于许多原因,她们在护理部门的人数过多,容易受到剥削。这些问题包括他们的就业和移民身份,例如,作为家庭私人雇用的未申报工人,以及因为遵守就业条例,如最低工资规定,是不平衡的。非自愿的兼职工作也很重要。trs0010.1177 / 10242589221099980transferbookreviews bookreview2022
Book Review: Who Cares? Attracting and Retaining Care Workers for the Elderly
This study was prepared and published at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and its themes have become all too familiar over the past 18 months. Elderly care and its workforce have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Workers in the sector have faced terrible circumstances and many elderly people and their carers have lost their lives prematurely. The pandemic has confirmed the fragility and structural problems in the provision of long-term care around the world and exacerbated the recruitment and retention challenges that are the focus of this study. At the same time, the pandemic has focused more public attention on those who provide care, bringing a previously invisible low status workforce into the limelight. This has generated an EU commitment to a new European Care Strategy and prompted many reports looking at the employment and working conditions in long-term care. Nevertheless, the challenges facing the sector remain acute (European Commission, 2021; Kessler et al., 2020). The study looks at the evidence base and considers best practices for stemming the crisis in long-term care. It draws on survey responses and interviews with country delegates, supplemented by national data, EU Labour Force Survey data and additional literature. It considers the situation of long-term carers for the elderly who provide their services to recipients at home or in institutions. These carers comprise two main occupations, nurses and personal care workers. In OECD countries over 70 per cent of long-term care workers are personal carers. In a context of rising demand for care and the shift of care from hospital to community settings, care demand is outstripping the supply of long-term care workers, and workforce shortages will worsen without urgent action. In the aggregate, OECD countries need to more than double the current number of longterm care workers to maintain existing ratios of caregivers to the elderly. These structural challenges stem from insufficient recruitment and retention, connected to low status, poor pay and working conditions, inadequate training and limited attention to skill acquisition and deployment. Staff shortages have a severe impact on quality of care, including unmet care needs and unnecessary hospital admissions. The study details the main characteristics of the workforce, which comprises predominantly middle-aged women, with a high share of foreign-born workers. Foreign-born workers make a vital contribution and represent over 20 per cent of the OECD countries’ long-term care workforce. They are overrepresented in the care sector and are susceptible to exploitation, for many reasons. These include their employment and immigration status, for example, as undeclared workers hired privately by households and because compliance with employment regulations, such as minimum wage provisions, is uneven. Part-time working, often on an involuntary basis, is also significant. 109998010999801099980 TRS0010.1177/10242589221099980TransferBook Reviews book-review2022