An Industry in the Making: The Emergence of Institutional Elder Care in Urban China

Demographic shifts in China pose unprecedented challenges in the care of a rapidly growing older population. Sporadic reports suggest the recent emergence of institutional elder care in China, but little is currently known about this phenomenon. This study documents the growth, ownership, financing, staffing, and resident characteristics of elder care institutions using survey data collected in 2009 from Nanjing, China, supplemented with government registry data from seven additional major Chinese cities. Between one‐half and two‐thirds of facilities operating in these cities were founded in the last decade, primarily in the non‐government sector. In Nanjing, government ownership dominated homes built before 1990 (96%) but was increasingly rare in the 1990s (60%) and in the 2000s (23%), a pattern observed in the other seven cities as well. In Nanjing, the average home now draws more than 80% of its daily operating revenues from private‐pay or other non‐government sources, and this share increases sharply with the recency of facility establishment. The majority (85%) of non‐government‐owned homes are receiving ongoing per‐bed subsidies from the government. The lack of clinical staff characterizes the majority of study facilities; most care staff are rural migratory workers. There is considerable variability across facilities in the case‐mix of residents in terms of functional dependence and acuity levels. These findings portray the emergence and rapid growth of a nascent industry of institutional long‐term care in urban China and a fundamental shift in institutional ownership, financing, and clientele.

[1]  H. Zhan Chinese Caregiving Burden and the Future Burden of Elder Care in Life-Course Perspective , 2002, International journal of aging & human development.

[2]  Lin Jiang Changing kinship structure and its implications for old-age support in urban and rural China. , 1995 .

[3]  Bei Wu,et al.  Institutional Care for Elders in Rural China , 2008, Journal of aging & social policy.

[4]  E. Croll Social Welfare Reform: Trends and Tensions , 1999, The China Quarterly.

[5]  Hong Zhang Who Will Care for Our Parents? Changing Boundaries of Family and Public Roles in Providing Care for the Aged in Urban China , 2007, Care Management Journals.

[6]  Xinping Guan,et al.  Recent Developments in Institutional Elder Care in China , 2006, Journal of aging & social policy.

[7]  I. Chi,et al.  Nursing homes in China. , 2008, Journal of the American Medical Directors Association.

[8]  Gordon H Guyatt,et al.  Quality of care in for-profit and not-for-profit nursing homes: systematic review and meta-analysis , 2009, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[9]  L. George,et al.  Family Dynamics of 63 Million (in 1990) to More Than 330 Million (in 2050) Elders in China , 2000 .

[10]  Richard Howe The Greying of the Middle Kingdom: The Demographics and Economics of Retirement Policy in China , 2006 .

[11]  Shang Xiao-yuan Moving towards a Multi-level and Multi-pillar System: Changes in Institutional Care in Two Chinese Cities , 2001, Journal of Social Policy.

[12]  H. Sinn Social Welfare Reform , 2000 .

[13]  M. Reuser,et al.  Ageing of a giant: a stochastic population forecast for China, 2006–2060 , 2007 .

[14]  C. Ikels Chinese Kinship and the State: Shaping of Policy for the Elderly , 1993, Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics.

[15]  L. Wong,et al.  Non-State Care Homes for Older People as Third Sector Organisations in China's Transitional Welfare Economy , 2006, Journal of Social Policy.

[16]  Mei Lin Liu,et al.  China: The Aging Giant , 2007, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[17]  Bei Wu,et al.  Emerging Services for Community-Based Long-Term Care in Urban China , 2005, Journal of aging & social policy.

[18]  K. Kinsella,et al.  An aging world: 2008. , 2009 .