Adolescent Young Carers Who Provide Help and Support to Friends
- Författare
- Brolin, R. Hanson, E. Magnusson, L. Lewis, F. Parkhouse, T. Hlebec, V. Santini, S. Hoefman, R. Leu, A. Becker, S.
- Titel
- Adolescent Young Carers Who Provide Help and Support to Friends
- Utgivningsår
- 2023
- Tidskrift
- Healthcare (Basel)
- Volym
- 11
- Häfte
- 21
- Url
- DOI: 10.3390/healthcare11212876
- Nyckelord
- health school outcomes well-being young carer young friend carer
- Sammanfattning
Prior studies emphasize the value of friends' support for children/adolescents who have a disability or suffer from mental ill-health or a long-term illness. However, few studies have explored how a caring role affects those young friend carers themselves. This paper addresses a gap in the research by focusing on this hitherto neglected group of young carers to explore the impact of providing care to friends. An online survey was employed for a cross-national study conducted in 2018-2019 in Sweden, Italy, Slovenia, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom to examine the incidence of adolescent young friend carers, the extent of care they provide, and their self-reported health, well-being, and school situation. The survey was completed by 7146 adolescents, aged 15-17, and 1121 of them provided care to a friend with a health-related condition, most frequently mental ill-health. They carried out high levels of caring activities, and a quarter of them also provided care to a family member. They experienced both positive and negative aspects of caring. Nevertheless, in comparison with adolescents who provided care to family members, they reported more health problems, with a dominance of mental ill-health, and they received lower levels of support. Since adolescent friends play a valuable role for young people with health-related conditions, especially mental ill-health, it is important to find ways of optimizing their caring experiences in order that those adolescents who choose to care for a friend can do so without it having a negative impact on their own mental health, well-being, and life situation.