Summary information

Study title

Combining Work and Care- How Do Workplace Support and Technologies Contribute to Sustainable Care Arrangements, 2017-2021

Creator

Yeandle, S, University of Sheffield
Heyes, J, University of Sheffield
Allard, C, University of Birmingham
Hamblin, K, University of Sheffield

Study number / PID

855239 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-855239 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Family carers, central to sustainable care, are mostly of working age and employed full-time. Their rising numbers include many mobile workers. Incompatibility between family care and paid work is a known risk to sustainable care, but better evidence is needed of the support needed to promote wellbeing among working carers and those they support. This team’s research on Combining Work and Care: How do workplace support and technologies contribute to sustainable care arrangements is designed to inform policy and practice on the planning and resourcing of care by generating new insights into sustainable care and wellbeing through comparison of developments in the UK and other countries. Previous UK research on this topic has mostly focused on flexible working arrangements and organisational case studies. Little is known about how care leave (on which the UK has not legislated) might be introduced, or about the voluntary initiatives already being implemented by employers. This research focused on under-researched aspects of the support needed to sustain the wellbeing of ‘working carers’: measurement of impact; the role and potential of schemes designed to improve workplace support; the impact and characteristics of statutory care leave in other countries and of their voluntary, employer-led, equivalents in the UK. The main research questions were: 1. What support do working carers need to fulfill both their work and caring responsibilities? What are their highest priorities for such support? 2. What constitutes good workplace support for carers in employment? How does it enhance carers’ ability to integrate their paid employment and caring roles? 3. What is the impact of this support on carers, employers, care users and care workers? What are its costs and benefits for employers and for different types of employee? 4. What are the key features of established/emerging carer ‘workplace standard’, ‘employer recognition’ and ‘benchmarking’ schemes; what do they...
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Methodology

Data collection period

06/11/2017 - 31/08/2021

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Text

Data collection mode

1) Qualitative in-depth interviews of 4 case studies to explore the policies available at organisation-level for working carers. Interview participants included working carers, line managers, HR managers, union representatives and carer network representatives/ 'champions'.2) a representative survey of working carers in England and Wales.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/P009255/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

The UK Data Archive has granted a dissemination embargo. The embargo will end on 05/01/2024 and the data will then be available in accordance with the access level selected.

Related publications

Not available