scholarly journals Expanding the Conceptualization of Support in Low-Wage Carework: The Case of Home Care Aides and Client Death

Author(s):  
Emma K. Tsui ◽  
Marita LaMonica ◽  
Maryam Hyder ◽  
Paul Landsbergis ◽  
Jennifer Zelnick ◽  
...  

Home care aides are a rapidly growing, non-standard workforce who face numerous health risks and stressors on the job. While research shows that aides receive limited support from their agency employers, few studies have explored the wider range of support that aides use when navigating work stress and considered the implications of these arrangements. To investigate this question, we conducted 47 in-depth interviews with 29 home care aides in New York City, focused specifically on aides’ use of support after client death. Theories of work stress, the social ecological framework, and feminist theories of care informed our research. Our analysis demonstrates aides’ extensive reliance on personal sources of support and explores the challenges this can create in their lives and work, and, potentially, for their communities. We also document aides’ efforts to cultivate support stemming from their home-based work environments. Home care aides’ work stress thus emerges as both an occupational health and a community health issue. While employers should carry responsibility for preventing and mitigating work stress, moving toward health equity for marginalized careworkers requires investing in policy-level and community-level supports to bolster employer efforts, particularly as the home care industry becomes increasingly fragmented and non-standard.

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 218-218
Author(s):  
Robyn Stone ◽  
Alex Hennessa ◽  
Natasha Bryant

Abstract Home-based care is a rapidly growing sector becoming more important to individuals, families, providers, and payers. The ways in which agencies create the work environment for home care aides who are essentially in their clients’ homes is not adequately documented and may be changing rapidly with labor market innovations. This qualitative study describes how different home care business models (e.g., non-profit VNAs, for-profit franchises, uber-style matching, worker-owned coops) address job design and the overall work environment for home care aides. Interviews with employers and focus groups with home care aides examine workplace practices, how work is organized and supported when the workforce is virtual and the workplace is a client’s home, and the perceived attributes of a positive workplace environment across business models. This study fills significant knowledge gaps about home care workplace design and the role of agencies in creating a supportive environment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1243-1249
Author(s):  
Emma K. Tsui ◽  
Wei-Qian Wang ◽  
Emily Franzosa ◽  
Tailisha Gonzalez ◽  
Jennifer M. Reckrey ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 219-219
Author(s):  
Emma Tsui

Abstract This case study explores an employer-initiated biweekly group support call for home care aides implemented by a large New York City-based home care agency during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, we investigate how agency staff used information gathered through these calls to intervene into existing agency communication and support systems for aides. Our single-site case study analyzes detailed notes from almost 100 support calls that took place between April 2020 and March 2021, as well as interviews with agency staff from communications, human resources, nursing, and other departments that support aides. We compare and contrast new communication and support mechanisms advanced in conjunction with these calls with agency systems pre-pandemic. Our findings suggest that while calls were initially targeted toward providing emotional and operational support, staff also advocated for more systemic supports. We discuss the sustainability of these new efforts, as well as ongoing barriers and gaps.


2022 ◽  
pp. 089124322110679
Author(s):  
Jennifer Randles

Drawing on feminist theories of parenting and the welfare state, I analyze experiences of diaper need as a case of how gender, class, and race inequalities shape the social organization of caregiving and limited policy responses. Data from in-depth interviews with 70 mothers who experienced diaper need and 40 diaper bank staff revealed obstacles low-income mothers face in managing lack of access to children’s basic needs and how gendered assumptions of parental responsibility thwart public diaper support efforts. I use this case to theorize gender policy vacuums: These occur when gender disparities and ideologies prevent systematic responses to structural problems. Empirically this study contributes to understandings of diaper need as a problem of the gender structure that cannot be solved with alternative diapering methods that assume middle-class, white, androcentric privileges. Theoretically it illuminates key mechanisms by which feminized care labor is devalued and rendered invisible and how this erasure rationalizes lack of redress for gendered inequalities and creates policy gaps around caregiving.


1989 ◽  
Vol 69 (3-2) ◽  
pp. 1103-1106
Author(s):  
Betty G. Dillard ◽  
Betty L. Feather

The Oberleder Attitude Scale was reduced from 25 to 16 items and was factored into three major concepts, potential, limitations, and stereotypes. Responses of 345 in-home care aides indicated that the 345 aides held positive attitudes toward their elderly patients.


Young ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 110330882096645
Author(s):  
Indigo Willing

This article examines the 1995 fictional feature film Kids, which locates its story in skateboarding culture. The film reached its 25th anniversary in 2020; it is directed by Larry Clark and written by Harmony Korine, both recognizable figures in skateboarding, and it featured a cast of youth from the New York skateboarding scene. The research analyses narrative content that depicts sexual coercion and rape. Contemporary social and feminist theories of sexual violence, rape culture and media on the film inform the analysis. The discussion points to how the characters that the boys play embody forms of hegemonic masculinity, pointing to the social and cultural dimensions of male power and how sexual violence can be an element of that. The article also presents an occasion to reflect on such issues in skateboarding culture more widely, with emerging insights that can be useful to studies of other male-dominated youth cultures, lifestyle sports and subcultures.


2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (9) ◽  
pp. 798-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashley L. Schoenfisch ◽  
Hester Lipscomb ◽  
Leslie E. Phillips

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