Baby Boomers value caring for aging parents more than earlier
generation…Surprising
findings from USC researchers show adult childrens' sense of duty towards
parents has grown stronger, not weaker over time
A new study from the University of Southern California's Leonard Davis
School of Gerontology found that the generation born in the 1950's and 60's
are more committed to caring for their aging parents than their own parents
were.
The findings, published in the current issue of the Journal of Marriage and
Family run contrary to popular notion that the institution of the family is
in decline.
"Our study provides evidence to the resilience of families," said Daphna
Gans, lead author of the study and
a doctoral candidate at the USC Davis School. "You expect the younger
generation would be lower than the generation before. But our results
suggest that families are still able to instill strong attitudes towards
familial responsibilities even in light of changing family dynamics and
forms."
The research is one of a set of studies looking at attitudes and behaviors
toward caring for aging parents using the USC Longitudinal Study of
Generations, which followed individuals from 333 families over two
generations. For this study Gans and co-author Merril Silverstein, professor
of gerontology and sociology at USC, examined expected behaviors of adult
children towards their aging parents over the 15-year period from 1985
through 2000.
Among their findings, an adult child's desire to care for an aging parent
peaks at the age of 51 when individuals are most likely to be called upon to
provide parental support and women consistently express stronger familial
obligations towards their parents than men.
The study also showed that the oldest respondents, presumably those most in
need of care, valued it the least. The researchers say this illustrates that
as parents get closer to death, they become more altruistic toward their
children – that is, they make fewer demands of them in spite of their
growing needs and increasing dependence.
"Very old adults give priority to their adult children and grandchildren and
want to see them thrive, even if it means getting less care then they may
actually need," said Silverstein.
Both generations surveyed show a slight dip in attitudes towards parental
caregiving starting in the 1980's. However throughout the 15 years studied,
the younger generation responded more favorably to providing care than the
older generation ever did.
The pair's earlier findings, along with Frances Yang of Harvard Medical
School, showed that daughters were most likely to give support and mothers
were most likely to get it. In fact, a mother in good health is more likely
to receive support from children than a father in poor health. (Journal of
Family Issues, August 2006)
Analyses for the current study were performed using four waves of data from
the USC Longitudinal Study of Generations. Estimations were made using 4,527
observations from 1,627 individuals nested within 333 families. Findings
were discussed in terms of the flexibility of responsibility levels for
older generations over the entire lifespan.