2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2005.00476.x
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Finding dignity in dirty work: the constraints and rewards of low‐wage home care labour

Abstract: The ageing of the population in the US and elsewhere raises important questions about who will provide long-term care for elderly and disabled people. Current projections indicate that home care workers -most of whom are unskilled, untrained and underpaid -will increasingly absorb responsibility for care. While research to date confirms the demanding aspects of the work and the need for improved working conditions, little is known about how home care workers themselves experience and negotiate their labour on … Show more

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Cited by 270 publications
(287 citation statements)
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“…Moderate to high social support from the recipient dropped the risk of being in the most chronic group by approximately onethird. Positive emotional ties connecting providers with recipients may mitigate job strain and impart dignity to an otherwise difficult, demanding, and often demeaning, service job (Chichin, 1992;Denton et al, 2002;Stacey, 2005). Furthermore, Lindahl and others have described the relationship between the home care professional and care recipient as one of 'being there for each other' (Lindahl et al, 2011).…”
Section: Temporal Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moderate to high social support from the recipient dropped the risk of being in the most chronic group by approximately onethird. Positive emotional ties connecting providers with recipients may mitigate job strain and impart dignity to an otherwise difficult, demanding, and often demeaning, service job (Chichin, 1992;Denton et al, 2002;Stacey, 2005). Furthermore, Lindahl and others have described the relationship between the home care professional and care recipient as one of 'being there for each other' (Lindahl et al, 2011).…”
Section: Temporal Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of these activities are classified as 'dirty work', and can be challenging for domiciliaries. It is widely argued that because of stigma attached to the dirty work in domiciliary care, it is undervalued (Twigg, 2000;Stacey, 2005Stacey, , 2011McGregor, 2007;England and Dyck, 2011). Although surprisingly these studies have not examined how this dirt can also create a dirty workplace.…”
Section: Dirty Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Twigg (2000) mentions the smell of bodily fluids and incontinent clients, but her focus is on the dirty work rather than the workplaces. Quotations from domiciliaries in Stacey's (2005) study do reveal how dirt from the clients can infiltrate the workplace, such as the leakage of bodily fluids onto sofas. Later Stacey (2011) does briefly describe the potential for a client's home to be "unsanitary and even threatening" (p,49), but in neither of these publications is this discussed further.…”
Section: Understanding Domiciliaries' Workplacementioning
confidence: 99%
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