Informal carers are central to the community care policies which have emerg
ed during the last two decades. However, research has suggested that caring
is a gendered activity, disproportionately expected of women with conseque
nt disadvantage in terms of physical and mental health and material well-be
ing. Moreover, evidence has been presented that, in the past, women carers
were less likely to be offered the support of public services than their ma
le counterparts. A research project designed to test whether this pattern s
till applied in service provision to male and female spousal carers was car
ried out in an assessment and care management team working with older peopl
e. The results suggested that differences in professional responses to fema
le and male carers still persist and that some workers may be unaware of th
e gap between their intentions and their actions in assessing and planning
services. This evidence implies the need for further attention to be paid t
o these issues in training care managers and the importance of monitoring t
he outcomes of assessment along gender lines.