Becoming Sandwiched in Later Life: Consequences for Individuals’ Well-Being and Variation Across Welfare Regimes

Author:

Albertini Marco1ORCID,Lewin-Epstein Noah2,Silverstein Merril3,Tur-Sinai Aviad45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political and Social Sciences, University of Bologna , Bologna , Italy

2. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel

3. Department of Sociology, Maxwell School, Syracuse University , Syracuse, New York , USA

4. Department of Health Management Systems, Max Stern Yezreel Valley College , Yezreel Valley , Israel

5. School of Nursing, University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester, New York , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives The experience of being sandwiched between support obligations towards both aging parents and adult offspring is likely to become more common and more relevant. We aim at assessing the effect of demographic and social sandwiching on the psychological health and subjective well-being of individuals experiencing these transitions, and to what extent, these effects vary across welfare regimes. Methods Data are from 63,585 individuals aged 50–75 participating in the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). We estimate within- and between-individual effects using hybrid regression models to predict depressive symptoms (EURO-D) and subjective well-being (control, autonomy, self-realization, and pleasure [CASP]). Results Among demographically sandwiched women, transitioning into social sandwiching and into supporting only parents was associated with a moderate but statistically significant increase in EURO-D and decline in CASP scores. The same association is not observed for male respondents. The pattern of variation among women living in countries characterized by different welfare regimes suggests that social sandwiching is less detrimental in Nordic regimes than in other welfare contexts. Discussion Results from the between-individuals part of the model indicate that there is a selection into social sandwiching of more healthy individuals into support roles. However, the within-individuals part of the model indicates that the transition into social sandwiching has a detrimental effect on women’s (but not men’s) psychological health and well-being. The explanations for this gendered effect of social sandwiching may be found in the “invisible” support provided by women and the gendered division of specific care tasks.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference52 articles.

1. The generational contract in the family: An analysis of transfer regimes in Europe;Albertini,2013

2. The older sandwich generation across European welfare regimes: Demographic and social considerations;Albertini,2022

3. The “sandwich generation” revisited: Global demographic drivers of care time demands;Alburez-Gutierrez,2021

4. “It is a big thing”: Exploring the impact of osteoarthritis from the perspective of adults caring for parents–The sandwich generation;Barker,2017

5. Intergenerational help and care in Europe;Brandt,2009

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