Background Growing evidence has documented economic spillover efects experienced by intensive caregivers across the lifecycle. These spillover efects are rarely incorporated in economic analyses of health interventions. When these costs are captured, it is shown that commonly applied methods for valuing caregiver time may be underestimating the true opportunity costs of informal care. We explore how intensive caregiving is associated with economic outcomes for caregivers aged 18 years and older. Methods We used the cross-sectional 2013 RAND Survey of Military and Veteran Caregivers, a survey of 3876 caregivers and non-caregivers aged 18 years and older to conduct multivariable analyses and calculate average marginal efects, focusing on the association between intensive caregiving (i.e., providing≥20 h of weekly care) and six economic outcomes: schooling, labor force participation, taking unpaid time of of work, cutting back work hours, quitting a job, and early retirement. Results Intensive caregivers are 13 percentage points (95% confdence interval [CI] 8–18) less likely to be employed than non-caregivers. Intensive caregivers are 3 percentage points (95% CI 0.5–5) more likely to cut back schooling, 6 percentage points (95% CI 2–10) more likely to take unpaid time of of work, 4 percentage points (95% CI 0.1–9) more likely to cut back work hours, 12 percentage points (95% CI 8–15) more likely to quit a job, and 5 percentage points (95% CI 2–7) more likely to retire early due to caregiving responsibilities relative to non-intensive caregivers. Conclusions Despite the difculty of quantifying the true opportunity costs of informal care, policy makers and researchers need to understand these costs. The higher the opportunity costs of unpaid care provision, the less likely it is that caregivers will provide this care and the less economically attractive this ‘free’ source of care is from a societal perspective.
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CITATION STYLE
Jacobs, J. C., Van Houtven, C. H., Tanielian, T., & Ramchand, R. (2019). Economic Spillover Efects of Intensive Unpaid Caregiving. PharmacoEconomics, 37(4), 553–562. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40273-019-00784-7