Abstract

Planning for future health and social services (HSS) workforces must be informed by an understanding of how workers view their work within the context of their life and the challenges they will face across the course of life. There is a range of policies and provisions that states and organisations can adopt to create sustainable careers, support wellbeing at work, and extend working lives where appropriate, but the potential impact of these policies on the make-up of the workforce remains under investigation. This paper makes the case that service planners need to appreciate complex interplay between wellbeing and career decisions when planning the future workforce. It makes use of a recent survey of United Kingdom (UK) social workers (n = 1434) to illustrate this interplay in two ways. First, we present the analysis of how social workers’ perception of retirement and extended working lives are associated with dimensions of Work-Related Quality of Life (WRQL). We find that social workers who agreed that a flexible working policy would encourage them to delay their retirement scored lower on the Home-Work Interface and Control at Work dimensions of WRQL, while social workers who indicated a perception that their employer would not wish them to work beyond a certain age had lower Job and Career Satisfaction scores. Second, we propose a new typology of retirement outlooks using latent class analysis of these attitudinal measures. An 8-class solution is proposed, and we demonstrate the predictive utility of this scheme. Results are discussed in terms of the challenges for ageing Western populations and the usefulness of analysis such as this in estimating the potential uptake and impact of age-friendly policies and provisions.

Highlights

  • Population ageing is changing how we think about the future provision of healthcare and allied social services

  • The largest association was seen for people who reported that they would consider retiring due to ill-health, who scored over 0.5 standard deviations lower on the composite Work-Related Quality of Life (WRQL) scale

  • These individuals scored lower on all subscales, the smallest association was for stress at work

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Summary

Introduction

Population ageing is changing how we think about the future provision of healthcare and allied social services. The United Nations estimates that the world is on course to have more people over 65 than under 15 for the first time ever by 2074 [1]. In the United Kingdom, this crossover had already occurred in 2016, and by 2060, the population of over-65s and under-25 s are projected to be of approximately equal size. These changing demographics will affect both the demand for health and social services (HSS). The supply of workers to those services [2]. Incentivising older workers to defer retirement and. Public Health 2020, 17, 4722; doi:10.3390/ijerph17134722 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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