“…Studies from various countries show that gender (Lorenz‐Dant & Comas‐Herrera, 2021 ; Raiber & Verbakel, 2021 ; Zwar et al, 2022 ), age (Budnick et al, 2021 ; Hofstaetter et al, 2022 ), employment (Truskinovsky et al, 2022 ), living situation of the care recipient (Prins et al, 2021 ; Smaling et al, 2022 ), relationship to the care recipient (Tur‐sinai et al, 2021 ) and network (Allen et al, 2022 ) were important characteristics that distinguish how caregivers were affected. Studies in the Netherlands found that there were differences between men and women, and between those in different relationships to the care recipient (Prins et al, 2021 ; Raiber & Verbakel, 2021 ; Smaling et al, 2022 ; Tur‐sinai et al, 2021 ) Previous literature thus shows that consequences differed across countries, which may be due to differences in measures, COVID impact and healthcare system (Lorenz‐Dant & Comas‐Herrera, 2021 ; Santini et al, 2022 ; Tur‐sinai et al, 2021 ). In the Netherlands, there were relative large increases in informal care and decreases in formal care compared to other countries (Tur‐sinai et al, 2021 ).…”