Care
Care may be defined as the provision of what is necessary for the health, welfare, maintenance and protection of someone or something. It includes early childhood education and care, long-term care of older persons or those with disabilities and healthcare. To understand the implications of care, it is worth distinguishing between care recipients and people with care responsibilities (carers). It is also important to distinguish between care as paid or unpaid work and informal care provided by family and friends. The provision of care services is a key component of social protection, improving quality of life and access to education and employment for EU citizens.

Nieuw en aankomend
Vind hieronder de nieuwste inhoud over dit onderwerp.
12 November 2025
2 October 2025
31 July 2025
Het bevorderen van het welzijn van kinderen en het aanpakken van kinderarmoede zijn belangrijke doelstellingen van de nieuwe Europese Commissie. Dit rapport analyseert trends en ongelijkheden in de toegankelijkheid van diensten voor kinderen die moeten worden aangepakt om dit te bereiken. Aangezien het personeel een integrale rol speelt bij het bepalen van de kwaliteit en toegankelijkheid van deze diensten, beschrijft dit verslag bovendien de stand van zaken met betrekking tot de arbeidsomstandigheden en opleidingsmogelijkheden van het personeel. Goede arbeidsomstandigheden en betaalbare diensten van hoge kwaliteit, zoals voor- en vroegschoolse educatie en opvang, spelen ook een sleutelrol bij het stimuleren van arbeidsmarktparticipatie en het verhogen van de productiviteit.
Over Care
Meer informatie over dit onderwerp en de relevantie ervan voor het EU-beleid.
Hoogtepunten voor Care
Dit is een selectie van de meest relevante resultaten voor dit onderwerp.
25 October 2024
Paths towards independent living and social inclusion in Europe
Increasing emphasis on independent living and social inclusion is driving deinstitutionalisation – the shift away from a reliance on residential institutions towards family- and community-based settings for the provision of care and services. The aim is to ensure that people at risk of marginalisation have opportunities to participate fully in society and to exercise their personal rights and freedoms. An institutional culture that gives rise to social isolation and loss of autonomy can be present in any care setting, but it is commonplace in long-stay residential institutions such as children’s homes and nursing homes. Although deinstitutionalisation strategies have been adopted across the EU, shortcomings are apparent. This report presents evidence on changes in the extent of institutional living in the EU over time, as well as information on national deinstitutionalisation strategies and practices. It includes two person-centred case studies that illustrate the benefits of deinstitutionalisation and greater social inclusion and the challenges encountered in efforts towards these goals.
3 June 2024
European Child Guarantee monitor
20 September 2023
Guaranteeing access to services for children in the EU
The European Child Guarantee was established in 2021 to ensure that children in need have access to a set of key services. This policy brief analyses trends and disparities in children’s access to early childhood education and care, education, healthcare, nutrition and housing. This is done using a convergence analysis, which tracks whether Member States are improving in respect of specific performance indicators and whether disparities between them are expanding or narrowing. The analysis, where possible, also looks at the differences between urban and rural areas and between children living in households with different levels of income and risk of social exclusion. The indicators chosen for analysis highlight the links between the Guarantee, the European Semester and the Social Scoreboard.
6 July 2022
Fifth round of the Living, working and COVID-19 e-survey: Living in a new era of uncertainty
The fifth round of Eurofound's e-survey, fielded from 25 March to 2 May 2022, sheds light on the social and economic situation of people across Europe two years after COVID-19 was first detected on the European continent. It also explores the reality of living in a new era of uncertainty caused by the war in Ukraine, inflation, and rising energy prices.
The findings of the e-survey reveal the heavy toll of the pandemic, with respondents reporting lower trust in institutions than at the start of the pandemic, poorer mental well-being, a rise in the level of unmet healthcare needs and an increase in the number of households experiencing energy poverty.
28 January 2022
COVID-19 and older people: Impact on their lives, support and care
This report captures the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on the quality of life of older citizens, including the impact on their well-being, finances, employment and social inclusion. It explores the effects on the use of care services and older people’s reliance on other support. The report presents policy measures that have been implemented in EU Member States to support older people along all of the above-mentioned dimensions. These include measures to support independent living and schemes to support the labour market integration of older people or to prevent unemployment, all of which play a role in the quality of life of older citizens.
30 September 2021
COVID-19: A turning point for upward convergence in health and healthcare in the EU?
The impact of COVID-19 has moved public health up the EU social policy agenda. As the EU directs its efforts towards establishing a European Health Union to guard against future health crises, this policy brief examines the extent to which the EU achieved upward convergence in terms of health and healthcare outcomes, as well as health expenditures and delivery, prior to the pandemic. It also examines convergence patterns in infections and deaths from COVID-19 and in the mitigating measures adopted by the EU and national governments.
The findings indicate that, from 2008 to 2019, the health of EU citizens improved overall, and Member States converged in health outcomes, but disparities in government expenditures and delivery of health services continued to widen. Against this background, the COVID-19 pandemic caused further divergence, with death and infection tolls varying greatly across countries. The policy brief stresses that a European Health Union would ideally not only reinforce the crisis preparedness of the EU but also ultimately enable convergence in health and healthcare indicators across its Member States.
28 January 2021
Education, healthcare and housing: How access changed for children and families in 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on the accessibility of health, education and care services for all Europeans. This is also the case for children, who in several countries have seen their schools closed and replaced with remote learning. They have been affected, too, by the pandemic’s negative impact on their families’ access to healthcare and their mental health. Many families have also experienced rising housing insecurity. The Child Guarantee aims to ensure access to these resources for children in need.
Over 2020, Eurofound gathered wide-ranging data on Europeans’ lives during the pandemic. Based on this data, this policy brief documents changes in the accessibility of education, healthcare and housing in the EU27 between 2018–2019 and the summer of 2020, so that these developments can be taken into account when designing policy responses and mitigating measures.
Experts over Care
De onderzoekers van Eurofound bieden deskundige inzichten en kunnen worden gecontacteerd voor vragen of mediaverzoeken.
Marianna Baggio
Research officerMarianna Baggio is onderzoeksmedewerker bij de eenheid Sociaal Beleid van Eurofound, waar ze zich bezighoudt met aspecten van de Europese enquête over de kwaliteit van het bestaan (EQLS) en met de thema's loontransparantie en informele zorg. Voordat ze bij Eurofound in dienst trad, werkte ze als beleidsanalist bij het Competence Centre for Behavioural Insights van het Gemeenschappelijk Centrum voor Onderzoek van de Europese Commissie. Ze heeft als postdoc gewerkt aan de Universiteit Vita-Salute San Raffaele (Milaan) en de Universiteit van Trento. Ze brengt ook uitgebreide ervaring mee uit een eerdere rol als functionaris voor maatschappelijk verantwoord ondernemen (MVO) in Zuid-Afrika. Marianna heeft een doctoraat in Economie en Management van de Universiteit van Trento, gespecialiseerd in gedragseconomie.
Daniel Molinuevo
Senior research managerDaniel Molinuevo is onderzoeksmanager bij de eenheid Sociaal Beleid en trad in 2010 in dienst bij Eurofound. Zijn onderzoek naar gezondheid en sociale zorg heeft zich gericht op de kwaliteit en toegankelijkheid van diensten, hun digitale transformatie en de arbeidsomstandigheden van het personeel. Zijn werk was voornamelijk gericht op diensten voor kinderen, zowel bij Eurofound als bij UNICEF, waar hij in 2021 werkte ter ondersteuning van de uitvoering van de Europese kindergarantie. Hij studeerde sociologie in Salamanca, Spanje en aan de Humboldt Universiteit in Berlijn. Hij behaalde een MA in Europese Politieke en Administratieve Studies aan het Europacollege in Brugge en een MSc in Europees Sociaal Beleid aan de London School of Economics, waar hij ook als onderzoeker werkte.
Hans Dubois
Senior research managerHans Dubois is senior onderzoeksmanager bij de eenheid Sociaal Beleid van Eurofound. Zijn onderzoeksthema's zijn onder meer huisvesting, overmatige schuldenlast, gezondheidszorg, langdurige zorg, sociale uitkeringen, pensionering en kwaliteit van leven in de lokale omgeving. Voordat hij bij Eurofound in dienst trad, was hij universitair docent aan de Kozminski-universiteit (Warschau). Hij voltooide een doctoraat in Business Administration and Management aan de Bocconi Universiteit (Milaan), nadat hij als onderzoeksmedewerker had gewerkt bij het European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies (Madrid).
Alle inhoud voor Care
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