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      Wages or Legitimacy? A Qualitative Analysis of Home Care Worker Perspectives in Choosing Work Settings

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          Abstract

          Directly-Funded (DF) home care allows users to organize and purchase their own care services and is expanding globally. Little is known about the career pathways of home care workers. Our study asks, what experiences and factors do home care workers consider when choosing a work setting? And, specifically, what influences their decisions to work directly for their clients? Framed with Cranford’s (2020) flexibility-security matrix for analyzing home care dynamics, we remotely interviewed 20 home care workers in two Canadian provinces. Three team members conducted axial coding and thematic analysis using Dedoose software. We identified personal and material factors at the intimate and labor market level that workers weigh when choosing whether to work for an agency or directly for a client. At the intimate level, workers value the flexibility, autonomy, and respect facilitated in care relations when working directly for a client. At the labor market level, agencies provide better job security and the benefit of supervisory support but lower wages. Additionally, as care work often serves as a stepping stone for immigration and citizenship agency positions are considered a more “legitimate” option than working directly for a client. Our study shows that workers directly employed by their clients enjoy more flexibility but lack security, whereas agency employed workers risk immediate reductions in working conditions in exchange for limited improvements in safety and supervision and, like other frontline care work, DF home care represents a key career pathway for immigrants with previous experience in health and social care settings.

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          How Many Interviews Are Enough?: An Experiment with Data Saturation and Variability

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            Doing Justice to Intersectionality in Research

            Intersectionality involves the study of the ways that race, gender, disability, sexuality, class, age, and other social categories are mutually shaped and interrelated through forces such as colonialism, neoliberalism, geopolitics, and cultural configurations to produce shifting relations of power and oppression. The concept does not always offer a clear set of tools for conducting social research. Instead, it offers varied strands of thought, pointing to different methodologies and methods for doing intersectional research. In this article, we trace the genealogy of intersectionality as theory and methodology to identify challenges in translating the concept into research methods, and we review debates about what we identify as three “critical movements” in the intersectionality literature, comprising contestations regarding the theory’s aims, scope, and axioms, in scholarship and research. Finally, we consider how these critical movements can offer researchers some guiding ethical principles for doing intersectionality justice in social research.
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              The evolving role of health care aides in the long-term care and home and community care sectors in Canada

              Health Care Aides (HCAs) provide up to 80% of the direct care to older Canadians living in long term care facilities, or in their homes. They are an understudied workforce, and calls for health human resources strategies relating to these workers are, we feel, precipitous. First, we need a better understanding of the nature and scope of their work, and of the factors that shape it. Here, we discuss the evolving role of HCAs and the factors that impact how and where they work. The work of HCAs includes role-required behaviors, an increasing array of delegated acts, and extra-role behaviors like emotional support. Role boundaries, particularly instances where some workers over-invest in care beyond expected levels, are identified as one of the biggest concerns among employers of HCAs in the current cost-containment environment. A number of factors significantly impact what these workers do and where they work, including market-level differences, job mobility, and work structure. In Canada, entry into this ‘profession’ is increasingly constrained to the Home and Community Care sector, while market-level and work structure differences constrain job mobility to transitions of only the most experienced workers, to the long-term care sector. We note that this is in direct opposition to recent policy initiatives designed to encourage aging at home. Work structure influences what these workers do, and how they work; many HCAs work for three or four different agencies in order to sustain themselves and their families. Expectations with regard to HCA preparation have changed over the past decade in Canada, and training is emerging as a high priority health human resource issue. An increasing emphasis on improving quality of care and measuring performance, and on integrated team-based care delivery, has considerable implications for worker training. New models of care delivery foreshadow a need for management and leadership expertise - these workers have not historically been prepared for leadership roles. We conclude with a brief discussion of the next steps necessary to generating evidence necessary to informing a health human resource strategy relating to the provision of care to older Canadians.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Inquiry
                Inquiry
                INQ
                spinq
                Inquiry: A Journal of Medical Care Organization, Provision and Financing
                SAGE Publications (Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA )
                0046-9580
                1945-7243
                6 June 2024
                Jan-Dec 2024
                : 61
                : 00469580241248094
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
                [2 ]Chung-Ang University, Seoul, South Korea
                [3 ]University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
                [4 ]McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
                Author notes
                [*]Christine Kelly, Max Rady College of Medicine, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, S-108E Medical Services Building – 750 Bannatyne Avenue, Winnipeg, MB R3E 0W3, Canada. Email: christine.kelly@ 123456umanitoba.ca
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3316-3258
                Article
                10.1177_00469580241248094
                10.1177/00469580241248094
                11160113
                38842193
                57bf4c3d-bc69-45d0-aa59-79cac083fe5a
                © The Author(s) 2024

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page ( https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).

                History
                : 5 January 2024
                : 15 March 2024
                : 2 April 2024
                Funding
                Funded by: Institute of Health Services and Policy Research, FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/501100000037;
                Award ID: PJT-169001
                Categories
                Original Research
                Custom metadata
                January-December 2024
                ts1

                canada,home care agencies,home care services,home health aides,health workforce

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