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Report / In Depth

Professional Caregiving Men find Meaning and Pride in their Work, But Face Stigma

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Abstract

This report is part of the Better Life Lab’s multi-year project to better understand the experiences, attitudes, and beliefs of men who provide paid and unpaid care—the channels that enable them to do it, and the barriers that keep them from it. This is the only report in the series to explore the experiences of professional caregiving men. For the project, we partnered with the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago (NORC) to conduct a nationally representative survey of 2,996 American adults and used 20|20 Research’s QualBoard facilitation platform to host five online focus group discussions. Both the survey and focus group data were collected before the outbreak of the COVID-19 global pandemic.

Acknowledgments

This study was conducted with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Pivotal Ventures, an investment and incubation company created by Melinda Gates. The authors wish to thank our colleagues at NORC and the men who generously gave our team guidance on shaping the focus group questions. Thanks also to Aaron Loewenberg who took time out of his schedule to share insights and expertise. Thanks, too, to Better Life Lab senior fellow Vicki Shabo, for her thoughtful review, the Better Life Lab team – Haley Swenson, Sade Bruce, Jahdziah St. Julien and Stavroula Pabst. And to former colleagues Amanda Lenhart, Alieza Durana, Elizabeth Weingarten and Leah Crowder. Thanks, too, to Samantha Webster, Maria Elkin and the New America Communications team.

More About the Authors

Emily Hallgren
Emily Hallgren

PhD Intern, Better Life Lab

RoselynMiller.jpg
Roselyn Miller Champion
Professional Caregiving Men find Meaning and Pride in their Work, But Face Stigma

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