Do they look after their own? Informal support for South Asian carers
- 19 August 2004
- journal article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Health & Social Care in the Community
- Vol. 12 (5) , 398-406
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2524.2004.00509.x
Abstract
Policy on care in the community was founded on the premise that the care of frail elderly people with disabilities would be a joint responsibility for health and social care professionals, and family carers, supported by people within their social networks. The policy assumes that such social networks are common features of all communities in contemporary Britain, containing a reserve of people who can be called upon to provide support to carers. The present paper draws on material gathered for a qualitative study of the experiences carers in South Asian communities to examine the quality and quantity of informal support that was available in different types of households. Male and female carers were selected from the Punjabi Sikh, Gujarati Hindu, and Bangladeshi and Pakistani communities. A total of 105 carers participated in the project. Participants were caring for people in all age groups with physical and/or mental distress, and in some cases, with multiple and complex impairments. The analysis of carers’ accounts suggested that, for a variety of reasons, the main carer, irrespective of gender, had limited support both in nuclear and extended households. In addition, societal attitudes towards disability and the fear of obligation prevented the seeking and accepting of help from wider social networks. The paper concludes that the evidence does not support the assumption about extended families, and their willingness and ability to support carers. Many issues highlighted in this paper have far-reaching implications for policy makers in many countries in the West where South Asian people have made their homes.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Asian Carers' Experiences of Medical and Social Care: The Case of Cerebral PalsyThe British Journal of Social Work, 2003
- Health and social care needs in minority communities: an over-problematized issue?Health & Social Care in the Community, 2000
- Family care-giving and chronic illness: how parents cope with a child with a sickle cell disorder or thalassaemiaHealth & Social Care in the Community, 2000
- Screening and counselling for sickle cell disorders and thalassaemia: The experience of parents and health professionalsSocial Science & Medicine, 1998
- Ethnicity and Caring for a Disabled Child: The Case of Children with Sickle Cell or ThalassaemiaThe British Journal of Social Work, 1996
- The use of focus group interviews in nursing research: Issues and challengesNT Research, 1996
- Gender, Family and SocietyPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1996
- Qualitative Research: Introducing focus groupsBMJ, 1995
- The Caring RelationshipPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1989
- Gender, Household Composition and Receipt of Domiciliary Services by Elderly Disabled PeopleJournal of Social Policy, 1988