Families and caring
This bibliography provides a selection of recent references from the Australian Family & Society Abstracts database and the Australian Institute of Family Studies library catalogue.
The publications listed are held in the Australian Institute of Family Studies Library and can be borrowed via the inter library loan system or acquired directly from the issuing body. Direct links to documents on the Web are provided when available.
References are arranged alphabetically by title in the following sections:
Contents
- Child friendly communities
- Families caring for disabled mmbers
- Family friendly work options
- Family members as carers
- Grandparents raising grandchldren
- Male carers
- Out-of-home care
Child friendly communities
Building child friendly communities.
Smart, Fiona
Rattler no.76 Summer 2005: 17-19
The Child Friendly Challenge, which encourages all Australians to help
ease the stress of a parent or carer and make a difference to a child,
was developed in response to the national rise in child abuse cases.
This article discusses the benefits of child friendly communities and
how they can be created.
Child friendly community action kit: a guide to building child friendly
communities.
National Association for Prevention of
Child Abuse and Neglect (NAPCAN)
Surry Hills, NSW: NAPCAN
Foundation, 2005, 60p, tables, figures, Online only (PDF 5202K)
Information on how to make your community child friendly is provided
in this kit. The kit presents advice on forming a child friendly
Community Action Group and planning child friendly initiatives. It
discusses the issue of child abuse and neglect, including types of abuse,
the effects of child abuse and neglect, the long term nature of the
problem, the economic cost of child abuse and neglect, and the benefits
of prevention. It describes what a child friendly community is, how child
friendly communities prevent child abuse and neglect, and indicators of a
child friendly community, and it looks at examples of child friendly
community initiatives in New South Wales, Victoria and the Northern
Territory. It explains the three stages of making change raising
awareness, increasing participation and building capacity - and gives
tips on organising events, fundraising, managing your group, networking,
planning your activities, working with the media and having your own
newsletter.
Cities for angry young people? From exclusion and inclusion
to engagement in urban policy.
Iveson, Kurt
In:
Gleeson, B. and Sipe, N. eds. Creating child friendly cities: reinstating
kids in the city. Abingdon, Oxon, UK: Routledge, 2006, p49-65
Efforts are often made to exclude 'anti social' young people from urban
spaces, due to concerns about crime and social disorder. This chapter
summarises arguments for replacing exclusion policies with the inclusion
of young people in public spaces and questions the benefits of this
approach. Strategies that
focus on engagement with young people are put forward as alternatives to
social control. The chapter looks at some case examples of neo liberal
approaches to urban governance and their impact on young people, namely a
curfew for young people in Perth and finding 'graffiti solutions' in
Sydney.
Creating child friendly cities: reinstating kids in the
city.
Gleeson, Brendan ed.; Sipe, Neil ed.
Abingdon,
Oxon, UK: Routledge, 2006, 164p, tables, figures, ill.
What
effects do the physical and social make up of Western cities have on
children and young people? Do they service and nourish their health and
well being needs? This book examines the study of the urban welfare of
children at the international, national and metropolitan levels; and the
relationship between planning and health and their effect on children.
It then looks at three policy and program examples that aim to address
the well being of children in contemporary Australian and New Zealand
cities: the walking school bus programs in Auckland; strategies to avoid
the 'social trap' that sees parents driving their children everywhere
because of uncertainty about what other parents do; and a review of the
efforts of planners, developers and designers to provide recreational
spaces for children in cities. All chapters have been selected for
individual indexing.
The National Agenda for Early
Childhood.
Department of Families, Community Services and Indigenous
Affairs
Canberra,
ACT: The Department, 2007, 37p,
Online (PDF 131KB)
The purpose of the framework set out in this document is to guide
current and future activity in Australia that supports optimal child
development during the first eight years of life, including before
birth. The framework proposes four areas for action, based on the
latest evidence and on feedback from widespread consultations. These
are: healthy families with young children; early learning and care;
supporting families and parenting; and, building child friendly
communities.
United Nations: a key player in a global movement for child friendly
cities.
Malone, Karen
In:
Gleeson, B. and Sipe, N. eds. Creating child friendly cities: reinstating
kids in the city. Abingdon, Oxon, UK: Routledge, 2006, p13-32
During the past 50 years, cities have been growing at an alarming
rate due to massive increases in population growth. In response to
this change, the United Nations has turned its attention to
sustainable development and children's rights. This chapter
outlines these efforts, as well as UNICEF's Child Friendly Cities
Initiative and UNESCO's Growing Up in Cities project. It looks at
the needs of children and young people, the positive and negative
aspects of growing up in cities, and the benefits of the above
strategies.
Visions of a child friendly
community.
National Association for Prevention of
Child Abuse and Neglect NSW; University of Western Sydney
Haymarket, NSW: National Association for Prevention of Child Abuse and
Neglect NSW, 2005, 27p, and Online (PDF 1.61MB)
Academics,
decision makers, practitioners, people who care for children, and
children themselves were consulted about their vision of a child friendly
community. Their ideas which comprise this booklet include: friendly
relationships, space, transport, services, work and learning; taking
children and young people and their rights seriously; listening to
children and young people; working with children and young people;
valuing difference; understanding the needs of children with
disabilities; safety; balance; respect; valuing fathers; community
support; safe, supportive and stimulating schools; and the benefits of
mentoring.
What constitutes child friendly communities and how are they built?
Howard, Amanda
West Perth, WA: Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth,
2006, 55p (Evidence into action topical paper), Online (PDF 821K)
This paper draws on research and practice literature and on the
experiences and observations of practitioners working across
Australia in an attempt to identify the key themes and elements of a
child friendly community and how this kind of community can be
built. The literature reviewed spans the areas of child
development, community development, urban planning, community
economic development, social research and early childhood education.
Practitioners interviewed came from urban, regional, rural and remote communities in all states except Tasmania.
Woe or wellbeing? Creating a child friendly Macarthur Region.
Blakester, Adam
Public Administration Today no.8 Jul - Sept 2006: 54-58
A child friendly, community strengthening vision for the Macarthur
Region of Sydney, an area of social and economic disadvantage, was
developed in 2005. The vision aims to support the well being and
development of children and young people through supporting
relationships. This article discusses the development and
implementation of the vision, which includes workshops with children
and young people, Aboriginal workshops and a decision makers' forum.
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Families caring for disabled members
Disability and family carers.
Spicer, Ian
Family Matters no.76 2007: 30-31
This article summarises
many of the issues faced by families during lifelong care of family
members with disabilities. Issues include the effect on other
relationships, competing caring roles, social isolation, reduced labour
force participation, increased expenditures, care planning, limited
respite services, and longer life expectancy, with its effects on parents
and the types of care needed - all of which emphasises the need for
support and alternative care arrangements for these at risk families.
Out-of-home - not out of the family: rethinking the
care of children with profound disabilities.
Eyler,
Paula
Newcastle, NSW: Disability Advocacy Service Hunter, 2005,
14p, Online (PDF 89K)
Past practice saw the placing of
children with profound disabilities in large institutions soon after
birth. This paper reviews the current policy direction in light of the
views and experiences of families who care for their children with a
profound disability. It examines policies and practices for children with
profound disabilities for Australia (New South Wales), Canada, the United
States, and the United Kingdom. It also reports on extensive interviews
with the families of four children with profound disabilities living in
the Hunter region of New South Wales about their experience of caring for
their children and their views about alternative methods of caring for
their children.
Parents of adults with an intellectual
disability.
Cuskelly, Monica
Family Matters no.74
2006: 20-25
There are an increasing number of adults with an
intellectual disability living into middle and old age, and often these
adults are cared for by their parents in the family home. Individuals
who live in other accommodation generally still receive both practical
and emotional support from their parents. This article reviews the
literature, details some of the demands and strains experienced by
parents of adults with an intellectual disability, and examines factors
that research suggests may affect parents' capacities to cope with
these.
Services for children with a disability and their families: Department of
Ageing, Disability and Home Care (DADHC): progress and future
challenges.
NSW Ombudsman
Sydney, NSW: NSW
Ombudsman, 2006, 12p, tables, Online (PDF 179K)
This is a
follow up special report to Parliament to one made in 2004 which
investigated how the NSW Department of Ageing, Disability and Home Care
implemented its policy for children and young people with a disability.
Particular focus was on supporting families at risk of giving up the care
of their child, arrangements to support children and young people who
were voluntarily placed in care, and arrangements to monitor the quality
of accommodation services provided on a fee-for-service basis. The report
acknowledges the progress made by the department to address the issues
raised, reports on what the department has done, or is doing, to improve
service provision to children with disabilities and their families, and
foreshadows the need for future assessment of the longer-term results of
the department's changes on those dependent on disability services and
support.
Stronger together:
a new direction for disability services in NSW:
2006-2016.
New South Wales. Department of Ageing,
Disability and Home Care
Sydney, NSW: Department of Ageing,
Disability and Home Care, 2006, 33p, Online
'Stronger together', the NSW Government's commitment to
the specialised disability support system over the next ten years, aims
to deliver more support more quickly for people with a disability and
their families and carers. The initiative has a focus on strengthening
families, promoting community inclusion, and improving the service
system's capacity and accountability. This paper outlines the ten year
plan.
Supporting families supporting young carers.
Carers
Australia and Australia. Department of Family and Community Services
Canberra, ACT: Department of Family and Community Services, 2005, 32p,
and Online (PDF 686K)
This booklet contains advice and
strategies to help parents whose children care for a friend or family
member with an illness, a disability, a mental health issue or a drug and
alcohol problem. It contains case studies and discusses: the effects of
caring on children and young people; what child carers and young carers
need; feelings and relationships; taking care of yourself so you can take
care of your children; discussing things as a family; celebrating the
positives; where to get help in an emergency; and other support that is
available.
The individual and family impact of care for a person who has
chronic serious illness or disability.
Cantwell-Bartl,
Annie
Grief Matters v.9 no.1 Autumn 2006: 12-14
The
personal care and support of a person with a severe disability or a
chronic illness can extend over a lifetime. This article focuses upon the
experience of the parents, or carer, and the wider family impact. Carers'
needs are frequently neglected, and the family's needs disenfranchised.
Carers and their families can experience many losses and cumulative
grief. Loss is further complicated by stress and sometimes by
psychological trauma, and can leave a legacy of anxiety, exhaustion and
other psychological effects, which can result in long term difficulties,
and sometimes family breakdown. In spite of the difficulties this care
can also be a privilege, but families require professional recognition,
advocacy and ongoing support. (Journal abstract)
Tjulngula (we are together): Tri-State Disability Services
Framework 2005-2008 for the Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara
Lands.
Tri-State Disability Services Group
Darwin, NT: Northern Territory Department of Health and Community
Services, 2005, 10p, Online (PDF 1.7MB)
The Tri-State
Disability Services Group (TDSG) was established in 2003 by the Northern
Territory Department of Health and Community Services, the Western
Australian Disability Services Commission, and the South Australian
Department of Family and Community Services to coordinate disability
services across the 'cross-border region' or country of the
Ngaanyatjarra, Pitjantjatjara and Yankunytjatjara (NPY) people which
stretches across 28 communities and homelands. The NPY Lands, where
approximately 6000 people live, cover 350,000 square kilometres of South
Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory. The framework
contains principles and objectives for collaboration between the three
jurisdictions, to enable joint planning, development and funding of
disability services between governments, non-government services and
communities.
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Family friendly work options
A really good husband: work/life balance, gender equity and
social change.
Connell, R W
Australian Journal of
Social Issues v.40 no.3 Spring 2005: 369-383
'Work/life
balance' as a contemporary issue is fundamentally linked with gender
justice. The issue emerged from historical transformations of the gender
order, in which masculinities and femininities were attached to distinct
spheres of home and workplace; but this institutional division has been
weakening. Current dilemmas are documented in a field study of gender
equity issues in ten public sector worksites. Because domestic labour is
still predominantly women's work, 'family friendly' workplace policies
mainly serve to support women's domestic commitments. Women are held
accountable for managing the balance, though this has now also become
part of the work of managers. Other aspects of public sector
restructuring work against men's commitment to domestic equality. In
these circumstances the ideal of 'balance' is itself open to debate. The
ideological consequences of the re-inscription of maternity and
contemporary anxieties about masculinity require a renewal of the concept
of the common good as a basis of policy. (Journal abstract)
Better conditions, better business: a report on carer and family friendly
provisions in Australian small and medium enterprises.
Sensis
Canberra, ACT: Office for Women, 2007, 49p, tables, figures,
Online (PDF 1.91MB)
Commissioned by the Office for Women,
this report examines the availability and take up of family friendly
provisions within Australian small and medium enterprises. It draws upon
2006 data from the Sensis Business Index survey of 1,800 small and medium
enterprise operators. For this survey, additional questions were asked
covering 19 specific carer and family friendly provisions, as well as
providing businesses with the opportunity to discuss other provisions
they offered, the impact and potential impact of skills shortages on
their businesses, and their ability to change working provisions to
attract and retain quality employees.
Beyond the 'crisis' rhetoric: designing policy for work and
family integration for employed mothers.
Lindsay, Jo;
Maher, JaneMaree
Just Policy no.38 Dec 2005: 21-26
The
rhetoric of crisis characterising public debate on family friendly work
places and policies suggests an inherent conflict between women's paid
work and mothering. The paper acknowledges the considerable difficulties
that obstruct the reconciliation of work and family; maternity leave,
childcare and part time work policies and practices in Australia provide
clear evidence of a hostile working environment for working mothers. It
argues, however, that the 'crisis' label is counterproductive because it
focuses on the conflict rather than on the practices and tactics that
could advance policy debate towards the development of an integrated
family policy straddling social security, industrial relations, taxation
and health considerations.
Creating family friendly workplaces: getting the balance
right for women in small non government organisations.
Melbourne, Vic: WIRE, 2006, 27p
Information on family
friendly workplace policies and practice is presented in this booklet,
which addresses the following topics: why we need family friendly
workplaces; the options available to help women balance work and family
life; how to make these options happen in the workplace; how small
organisations can overcome the barriers to implementing family friendly
practices.
Good mothers and good workers: a case study exploring the
'seamless' approach to work and child care responsibilities.
Willis, Karen; Natalier, Kristin
Just Policy no.39 Mar 2006:
39-44
Discourses on women's expected priorities in relation
to work and family responsibilities are explored. The article presents a
case study of Janie Dickinson, mayor of Launceston, who brought her child
to work rather than making use of other child care options. It argues
that child care services are based on conceptual distinctions of worker
and mother, and that those who do not keep these identities separate are
regarded as problematic. The article discusses the role of the media and
three key themes in the debate: role conflict, the imposition of
individual choice, and equality in the workplace. It considers how the
idea of family friendly is conceptualised in our society.
Men's uptake of family-friendly employment provisions.
Bittman, Michael; Hoffmann, Sonia; Thompson, Denise
Canberra, ACT:
Department of Family and Community Services, 2004, 208p, (Policy research
paper no.22) and Online (PDF 1140K)
This report of research
into men's uptake of family-friendly workplace provisions comprises two
parts: a review of the literature in the area; and two case studies of
companies that have introduced family friendly policies into the
workplace, one a manufacturer operating in a highly competitive market,
and the other a corporatised public utility. The report reviews the
advantages and disadvantages for men of managing the competing demands of
work and family, noting that take up rates for Australian men are low. It
also gives details of policies designed to encourage men's use of
parental leave in ten countries. Barriers to men's use of available
provisions are identified.
Striking the balance: women, men, work and family: discussion paper
2005.
Goward, Pru; Mihailuk, Tania; Moyle, Sally; O'Connell, Karen; De
Silva, Natasha; Squire, Sarah; Tilly, Jo
Sydney, NSW: Sex Discrimination Unit, Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission, 2005, 135p, figures, tables, and Online
The ways in which men and women balance their family
responsibilities, their paid work, and the pressures and barriers
they face in doing so, are explored in this paper. The paper covers
the following: paid and unpaid work in Australian families; children,
gender and unpaid work; caring for people with disabilities, elder
care and grandparents as carers; why work and family issues are
important for Australian families and for Australia; effects on
children; relationship breakdowns and post divorce consequences;
macro economic effects of paid work and family imbalances; the social
benefits of care; anti discrimination legislation and family
responsibilities; the Sex Discrimination Act; workplace relations,
policies and practices and the business case for change; the
Workplace Relations Act; government support for working families;
attitudes to paid work and family responsibilities; and options for
reform.
Telework for Australian employees and businesses: maximising
the economic and social benefits of flexible working practices: report of
the Australian Telework Advisory Committee to the Australian
Government.
Australia. Department of Communications,
Information Technology and the Arts; Australia. Department of Employment
and Workplace Relations
Canberra, ACT: Department of
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts and Department of
Employment and Workplace Relations, 2006, 67p, and Online (PDF 744K)
As a flexible working arrangement, telework has the potential to
assist communities, government, employers and employees meet a number of
economic, social and personal goals. This report identifies
opportunities for telework to contribute to broader social and economic
goals identified by the Australian Government as areas of policy
priority. The report concludes that while there are employees and
businesses already undertaking telework through individual and collective
agreements at the workplace level, there are a number of organisations
that have not. This report identifies opportunities for action to
increase the uptake and spread of telework across workplaces and maximise
its potential benefits for Australian businesses, workers and
communities.
Voting with their feet: family friendliness and parent
employment in Australian industries, 1981-2001.
Strazdins,
Lyndall; Broom, Dorothy H; Meyerkort, Shannon; Warren, Belinda
Australian Bulletin of Labour v.32 no.4 2006: 381-400, figures, tables
Many Australian industries have instigated family friendly
provisions, but these vary. In some industries, the span of ordinary
working hours has also changed, requiring work on evenings, weekends and
holidays. How have these changes affected where parents work? Charting
1981 - 2001 Census data, this article found that fathers showed an
overall decline as a proportion of employed men, with little difference
among industries. Mothers also declined as a proportion of employed
women, but with divergent industry trends. Retail showed a seven percent
drop in mothers, following the deregulation of shopping hours. By
contrast, the public service, the industry with the most family friendly
conditions at the start of the study period, increased its share of
mothers by six percent. Minimal family friendly provisions and a wide
span of hours may make it harder to recruit or retain mothers and could
be a disincentive for mothers' employment. (Journal abstract, edited)
Work and family: the importance of workplace flexibility in
promoting balance between work and family.
Andrews,
Kevin
Canberra, ACT: Department of Employment and Workplace
Relations, 2005, 15p
Flexible, family friendly working
arrangements are needed to respond to the dramatic increase in numbers of
working women. The following issues are discussed in this paper: changes
in workforce participation; the importance of part time and casual work;
flexible working arrangements; maternity payment; government policies
assisting Australian families; workplace relations reforms; protection
against discrimination and unlawful termination; minimum entitlement to
parental leave; paid maternity and paid parental leave; personal or
carer's leave; Australian Workplace Agreements; Office of the Employment
Advocate's Better work life balance project; the Equal Opportunity for
Women in the Workplace Agency; industry projects on workplace
flexibility; National Work and Family Awards.
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Family members as carers
Carers' health: why we need a carer health
initiative.
Sheen, Colleen
Health Issues no.90
Autumn 2007: 12-14
Australian and international evidence
indicates that family carers generally have poorer health and well being
than non carers. Impact of caring is worse if the carer has been
providing care for a long time. The availability of carers, and their
ability to continue their caring role, is critical to the sustainability
of the current Australian health and community care systems. While the
Australian government has recognised the significant contribution of
carers - through income support for carers and carer support services by
way of national respite and other programs - little has been done to
promote and maintain the health and well being of carers through targeted
health programs and interventions. This article looks at health
initiatives aimed at improving carers' health and well being. (Journal
abstract)
Diverse
strategies for diverse carers: the cultural context of family carers in
NSW.
Cardona, Beatriz; Chalmers, Sharon; Neilson,
Brett
Parramatta, NSW: Centre for Cultural Research, University of
Western Sydney for the Department of Ageing, Disability and Home Care,
2006, 66p, tables, Online (PDF 193K)
This research into the
everyday experiences of carers from culturally and linguistically diverse
(CALD) and Anglo Australian backgrounds aimed to increase awareness and
understanding of the diversity of caring experiences, and the inter
relationship of cultural, socio economic and gender issues in shaping
these experiences. The report examines cultural dimensions of family
responsibility towards the elderly, factors influencing service use and
non use, caregiver burden, workforce development issues, under
utilisation of services, language barriers, dealing with disability
issues, carers and mental health issues, notions of entitlements and
citizenship rights, and carers in a global and cross cultural
context.
Parents of adults with an intellectual
disability.
Cuskelly, Monica
Family Matters no.74
2006: 20-25
There are an increasing number of adults with an
intellectual disability living into middle and old age, and often these
adults are cared for by their parents in the family home. Individuals
who live in other accommodation generally still receive both practical
and emotional support from their parents. This article reviews the
literature, details some of the demands and strains experienced by
parents of adults with an intellectual disability, and examines factors
that research suggests may affect parents' capacities to cope with
these.
Raising families: urban women's experiences of requiring
support.
Jackson, Debra; Mannix, Judy; Faga, Pat; Gillies,
Donna
Contemporary Nurse v.18 no.1 Dec 2004 - no.2 Jan 2005:
Special Issue: Advances in Indigenous Health Care: 97-107
This paper reports on an exploratory descriptive study of urban women's
experiences of dealing with difficult and demanding situations in their
lives as mothers and family carers in contemporary Australian society,
and explores women's experiences of seeking support for family issues.
Participants' insights about the nature and availability of support for
themselves and their families when in these stressful situations are
revealed. Participants sought support from various personal networks,
community and self help groups, and professional helpers. However,
adequate support was not always available. Nurses have the potential to
further develop their role in relation to providing support to women
raising families. (Journal abstract, edited)
Social policy for family caregivers of elderly: a Canadian,
Japanese and Australian comparison.
Harvey, Carol D H;
Yoshino, Satomi
Marriage and Family Review v.39 no.1 - no.2 2006:
143-158, table
What are the expected familial roles for care
of the frail elderly in Japan, Australia and Canada, and how do these
roles relate to government aged care policy? Government research reports
and policy documents from each of the above countries were analysed for
this study. The article summarises the history of elder care in each
country, before comparing the philosophy of their current aged care
policies.
The psychoeducation needs of parents who have an adult son or daughter
with a mental illness.
Reid, Joanne; Lloyd, Chris; de
Groot, Lyn
Australian e-Journal for the Advancement of Mental
Health (AeJAMH) v.4 no.2 Sept 2005: 13p, Online only (PDF 86K)
Since deinstitutionalisation, parents of adults with mental disorders
are increasingly utilised as a resource for their relatives' care. This
study used a general phenomenological perspective to capture people's
experiences. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with
eight parents who were members of the Schizophrenia Fellowship of
Southern Queensland to explore their perceptions of their psychoeducation
needs. The themes that emerged included the usefulness of past
experiences with psychoeducation, educational needs, barriers to
accessing information and support, and other unmet carer needs, including
the need for managing stress and emotional needs, recognition and
inclusion of family members in decision-making, and negotiating the best
care for their family member within the health care system. This study
adds to an increasing body of knowledge that advocates for the greater
inclusion and involvement of families in the care and treatment of their
relatives. Further research into the needs of families, in particular
barriers and supports in accessing information and services, is
recommended. (Author abstract)
Who will look after her when I die?
Report on the Ageing Carers of People With a Disability
Project.
Cameron, Jill
Footscray, Vic: Carers
Victoria, 2005, 31p, Online (PDF 378K)
The Ageing Carers
Project used a community development approach to work with unpaid carers
and parents who are 65 years and over who care for someone with a
disability and who live in the western metropolitan region of Melbourne.
The project worked to assist the carers and to help plan for continuity
of care for the person with a disability in order to ease carers'
concerns about the future. This report discusses ageing carers' health
and well being, issues for ageing carers identified in the literature,
service system issues identified in the literature, and findings from
consultations with service providers. It includes case studies.
Who's going to care? Informal care
and an ageing population.
Percival, Richard; Kelly,
Simon
Canberra, ACT: National Centre Social and Economic Modelling,
University of Canberra, 2004, 43p, tables, figures, Online only (PDF
393K)
The ageing of Australia's population along with the
shift from formal, institutional care to informal, home based care raises
questions about the future demand for and supply of carers for people
over the age of 65 in Australia. This study presents projections of this
demand and supply, based on Australian Bureau of Statistics population
and household projections and its Disability, Ageing and Carers Survey.
The study projections show a significant increase in the number of older
people likely to need informal care between 2001 and 2031, and a smaller
increase in the number of people likely to become carers. The composition
of the disabled and carers populations also shifted in the projections,
showing a greater concentration of elderly people in both groups.
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Grandparents raising grandchildren
Custodial grandparenting: individual, cultural, and
ethnic diversity.
Hayslip, Bert; Hicks-Patrick, Julie.
New York, NY : Springer Pub. Co., c2006.
xviii, 334 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
A resource for practitioners and educators who work
with grandparents raising their grandchildren.
Provides information which services can use to
evaluate their current policies and devise funds,
services and programs to help this growing population
successfully raise their grandchildren.
Family functioning: grandparents raising their grandchildren.
In: Australian social trends 2005. Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Canberra, ACT: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2005,
210p, figures, statistical tables (ABS catalogue no.4102.0)
In 2003, there were 22,500 Australian families in which grandparents were the
guardians of their grandchildren (31,100 children aged 0-17 years).
Australian Social Trends describes aspects of Australian society, and how
these are changing over time. Chapters focus on a major
area of social concern, and each includes national and state summary
tables, and information about data sources and definitions.
Grandparent-headed families in Australia.
Horner, Barbara; Downie, Jill; Hay, David; Wichmann, Helen
Family
Matters no.76 2007: 76-84, figure, illus.
Grandparent-headed
families are increasingly prevalent in Australia and are one of the
fastest growing forms of out-of-home care of children with the public
welfare system. However, there is minimal information regarding the
characteristics and experiences of Australian grandparent-headed families
who assume care through the intervention of child protection services, or
those who arrange parental care of their grandchildren privately.
Evidence is needed on which to build a policy or service framework to
address the health and wellbeing of these grandparents, and ensure
quality and safe care of children and young people who are no longer able
to live with their biological parent(s). (Journal abstract)
Grandparenting: present
and future.
Families Australia
Barton, ACT:
Families Australia, 2007, 42p (Family issues no.2), Online (PDF 278K)
The following issues for Australian grandparents and
grandchildren are identified and addressed in this report: grandparents
as carers; grandparents providing childcare; grandparents not seeing
grandchildren; the needs of grandchildren. The report summarises the
results of a forum on grandparenting, a focus group consultation and
other consultations and research. Its recommendations recognise that
many grandparents, especially those with primary caring responsibilities
for grandchildren, would benefit from more financial, social and
emotional support and from more information about where to get help.
Grandparents and other relatives raising kin children in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
Worrall, Jill.
Birkenhead, Auckland: Grandparents Raising Grandchildren Charitable Trust, c2005.
This paper presents the individual stories of grandparents and other relatives
who are the primary care givers to kin children in 323 New Zealand families.
Grandparents parenting grandchildren because of alcohol and
other drugs.
Baldock, Emma; Petit, Carolyn
Curtin,
ACT: Canberra Mothercraft Society, 2006, 60p, tables
The
Supporting Grandparents Parenting Grandchildren of Families Affected by
Alcohol and Other Drugs project aimed to raise the visibility of these
grandparents, identify their needs, strengthen family resilience and
enhance current services for grandparents. This report describes the
development, implementation and evaluation of the project. The project
began in 2004 and used an action research methodology.
Grandparents raising grandchildren: formation, disruption and
intergenerational transmission of attachment.
Connor,
Sandi
Australian Social Work v.59 no.2 Jun 2006: 172-184
Nationally and internationally, grandparents support their children
and grandchildren by caring for those children who may be at risk in
their own home, often in the contemporary context for extended periods.
Attachment theory provides a framework to consider how the lives of
children, parents and grandparents are affected when grandchildren come
to live with their grandparents, whether it be on a shared basis or as a
long-term arrangement. The concept also provides a guide to supporting
each generation in the contemporary context, as formal or informal
arrangements. (Journal abstract)
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Male carers
Distributions of caregiving tasks among family members: the
place of gender and availability.
Lawrence, J A; Goodnow,
J J; Woods, K; Karantzas, G
Journal of Family Psychology v.16 no.4
Dec 2002: 493-509, tables, figures
This article presents
results from two studies that investigated the ways in which care giving
is distributed among family members. The studies focussed on allocation
in terms of gender and availability related to other commitments such as
paid work, marriage and parenting. The authors consider the implications
for other circumstances and populations, and for public policy.
Elderly husbands caring at home for wives diagnosed with
Alzheimer's disease: are male caregivers really different?
Cahill, S
Australian Journal of Social Issues v.35 no.1 Feb 2000:
53-72, tables
In Australia, there is a dearth of literature
available on men as principal carers despite reports which show that in
the 60 + age group, looking after a sick spouse becomes the major form of
caregiving and men as carers predominate (ABS, 1993). The paper reports
findings from a Queensland study of 26 aged husbands who cared at home
for their cognitively impaired wives. In-depth interviews collected
quantitative and qualitative data about men's caregiving experiences.
Findings challenge the literature about the role gender plays in evoking
care and service responses. Results show how men demonstrated a strong
injunction to care, performed intimate personal care tasks competently,
received limited government support and derived some satisfaction from
the caregiving role. Despite similarities between male and female
caregivers being noted, some gender differences in the way in which men
approached the care role are described. The need for community care
policies to be more sensitive to the gendered context of elderly care
provision is discussed. (Journal abstract)
Men as caregivers: theory, research, and service
implications.
Kramer, Betty J.; Thompson, Edward H.
New York: Springer Publishing, 2002.
xii, 394 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Contents: 1. Men caregivers: an overview -- 2. What's unique
about men's caregiving? -- 3. Theoretical perspectives
on caregiving men -- 4. Methodological issues in
research on men caregivers -- 5. Psychosocial
challenges and rewards experienced by caregiving men:
a review of the literature and an empirical case
example -- 6. Physiological challenges associated with
caregiving among men -- 7. The experiences and
relationships of gay male caregivers who provide care
for their partners with AIDS -- 8. AIDS caregiving
stress among HIV-infected men -- 9. The voices of
husbands and sons caring for a family member with
dementia -- 10. Brothers and parent care: an
explanation for sons' underrepresentation -- 11.
Fathers as caregivers for adult children with mental
retardation -- 12. Differences between fathers and
mothers in the care of their children with mental
illness -- 13. Husbands caring for wives with cancer
-- 14. Professional sensitivity to
religion-spirituality among male caregivers -- 15.
Principles and interventions for working
therapeutically with caregiving men: responding to
challenges -- 16. Service utilization and support
provision of caregiving men -- Epilogue: implications
for practice and future research.
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Out-of-home care
Achieving placement stability in the lives of
children and young people in out-of-home care.
Queensland. Commission for Children and Young People and Child
Guardian
Brisbane, Qld: Commission for Children and Young People
and Child Guardian, 2006, 8p (Issue paper no.1 2006), Online (PDF
2259K)
What are the effects of placement instability for
children and young people in out of home care in Queensland and
elsewhere, and how can their long term needs and interests be better met?
This paper considers what is known about placement instability for
children in out of home care, looking at the impact of the age of the
child, timing and duration of placement, placement with siblings,
placement with relatives, family connections, behavioural and emotional
problems, failed attempts at reunification, and carers' skills and
commitment. It also discusses impacts of placement instability,
including poor attachment.
Achieving stable and culturally strong out of home care for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.
Secretariat of the National Aboriginal and Islander Child Care
(SNAICC)
North Fitzroy, Vic: Secretariat of National Aboriginal and
Islander Child Care, 2005, 30p, illus., and Online (PDF 836K)
This publication is an approach to out of home care for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander children that: is culturally strong and provides
security and stability without adoptions and the need for strict
permanency planning rules; includes a central role for foster carers in
supporting children in out of home care to maintain and strengthen their
connections with their Indigenous family and community; and recognises
the strengths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander family and
kinships systems. The paper represents the views of the National
Executive of the Secretariat of National and Aboriginal and Islander
Child Care (SNAICC), the national peak body in Australia representing the
interests of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and families,
and provides the recommendations of SNAICC.
Attachment and the role of foster carers.
New South Wales. Department of Community Services. Centre for Parenting
and Research
Ashfield, NSW: Centre for Parenting and Research, NSW
Department of Community Services, 2006, 3p (Research to practice note),
Online (PDF 136K)
The importance of attachment within the
context of foster care is discussed in this research note, which provides
background information about the relevance of attachment to children in
foster care and then covers: what attachment is, types of attachment,
disorganised attachment, children entering care, building relationships
in foster care, and things in relation to attachment for foster parents
and other carers to consider.
Enhancing out-of-home care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander young people.
Higgins, Daryl; Bromfield,
Leah; Richardson, Nick
Melbourne, Vic: Australian Institute of
Family Studies, 2005, 78p, tables, and Online
This project aimed to develop strategies to enhance the recruitment,
retention and support of Indigenous carers, and cultural connections for
Indigenous children in out of home care, particularly home based care.
Consultations with key stakeholders in the out of home care sector in
each state and territory were conducted, as were focus groups with
Indigenous young people in care, and Indigenous and non Indigenous carers
of Indigenous young people in Western Australia and Queensland. This
report describes the methodology and discusses the results: perspectives
of young people; perspectives of carers, agencies, departments and
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations; holistic approach to
service provision with Indigenous families; getting help for biological
parents; children with complex needs; interlinked nature of recruitment,
retention, assessment, training and support; pre placement; kinship
carers; the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Child Placement
Principle; roles of government, Indigenous and non government agencies;
types of care.
Exploring the dimensions of professionalising fostering:
carer's perceptions of their fostering role.
Smyth, Ciara;
McHugh, Marilyn
Children Australia v.31 no.1 2006: 12-20, tables
Australia is experiencing major difficulties attracting and
retaining foster carers. This paper examines data from a 2003-2004
survey of foster carers in New South Wales. The research explores
carers' perception of the nature of the fostering role and examines these
in relation to three dimensions of professionalisation: training, support
and payment. The findings indicate that the majority of carers believe
fostering should be regarded as a professional or semi professional role.
Among these carers, there was a higher level of support for the three
dimensions of professionalisation compared to carers who regard their
role as voluntary. This paper also addresses the policy implications of
these findings for the future recruitment and retention of carers.
(Journal abstract, edited)
Foster care: a vision for the future.
Weston,
Nina B
Corny Point, SA: Children in Crisis, 2006, 22p
The role of foster carers must be redefined and professionalised. This
booklet considers concerns about the current voluntary based system,
which lacks adequate training and support. It discusses standards of
care, the skills and attributes of foster carers, carer competencies and
accreditation, support for foster carers, and the recruitment and
retention of foster carers.
Out-of-home care in Australia: messages from
research.
Bromfield, Leah; Higgins, Daryl; Osborn,
Alexandra; Panozzo, Stacey; Richardson, Nicholas
Melbourne, Vic:
National Child Protection Clearinghouse, Australian Institute of Family
Studies, 2005, 133p, tables, Online
This research
project reviewed Australian out of home care research. It was designed
to share good practice in Indigenous out of home care arrangements, build
the capacity of Indigenous carers, identify the needs of non Indigenous
carers, and enhance cultural connections for Indigenous children. The
report contains the results of: an Australian and international
literature review; consultations with key stakeholders; and focus groups
in Western Australia and Queensland with Indigenous carers, non
Indigenous carers of Indigenous children, and Indigenous children and
young people. It discusses foster families; participation of children
and young people in care; cultural considerations in placement decisions;
reunification issues; outcomes for children and young people in care;
leaving care; residential and specialised models of care; kinship care;
professionals in associated fields working with children in out of home
care; the out of home care service system and policy; and service
provision and policy.
Recruiting, maintaining and retaining foster carers:
capturing the wisdom of carers and workers.
Hayden, Paula;
McHugh, Marilyn
Developing Practice: The Child, Youth and Family
Work Journal no.15 Autumn 2006: 19-27, table
Australian and
international research on the recruitment, maintenance and retention of
foster carers is reviewed. The article discusses the demographics of
foster carers, recruitment strategies, and training for carers. It
includes results of a forum with workers and carers, held in Sydney in
2005, that considered rural foster care, Indigenous foster care, and the
experiences of foster carers and workers.
Social and emotional issues of children in kinship foster
care and stressors on kinship carers: a review of the Australian and
international literature.
Dunne, Emer G; Kettler, Lisa
J
Children Australia v.31 no.2 2006: 22-29
The
Australian and international literature on social and emotional issues
affecting children in kinship foster care, and on stresses experienced by
kinship foster carers, is reviewed. The ideology supporting the use of
kinship care is that it is in the child's best interests because it helps
them to maintain ties with their family of origin. The literature
suggests that children placed with kinship foster carers suffer from a
range of social and emotional issues and these may impact on outcomes in
adulthood. The existing literature does not, however, adequately
differentiate the impacts of kinship care itself from the children's pre
existing difficulties and there is a paucity of literature comparing
kinship care outcomes with outcomes for children who have experienced
other forms of out of home care. Common stressors on kinship foster
carers are economic disadvantage, stress, health issues and lack of
resources. (Journal abstract, edited)
The recruitment, retention, and support of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander foster carers: a literature
review.
Richardson, Nick; Bromfield, Leah; Higgins,
Daryl
Melbourne, Vic: Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2005,
95p, tables, and Online
There are significantly
fewer Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander carers than there are
Indigenous children in out of home care. This report examines the
recruitment, retention, training, assessment and support of Indigenous
people caring for these children. It discusses: trends in out of home
care; out of home care and Indigenous people; the causes of child
maltreatment and other family violence in Indigenous communities; a
contextual framework for out of home care in Australia; the placement of
children into out of home care; Indigenous specific contextual issues in
out of home care in Australia; recruitment and retention of foster
carers; cultural competence; motivations to become a carer; effective
recruitment practices; assessment of foster carers; training; retention
and satisfaction; support; recruitment and retention of kinship carers;
gaps in the literature; a contextual framework for kinship care; children
and young people in care; children's wellbeing; children's services;
wellbeing of Indigenous children.
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