Recent research in Northern Ireland examining the needs and circumstances
of informal carers has highlighted the personal and financial costs of caring. In
this paper it is argued that these studies have taken no account of the
particular expectations and attitudes towards informal care that exist within
farm families. In these families there is a strong expectation that care for older
relatives will take place almost entirely within the family. The reputation of
the farm family within the local community is strongly dependent on their
treatment of the older generation. Help from the state and the voluntary sector
is extremely limited. Rather than being described as burdensome and difficult,
these family arrangements are described as beneficial for everyone involved. It
is argued that expectations and attitudes towards care within farm families are
significantly different from those in non-farm families and policy makers and
practitioners must take account of this in the context of care in the community.