The transition to parent care: Costs, commitments, and caregiver selection among children

TitleThe transition to parent care: Costs, commitments, and caregiver selection among children
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsLeopold, T, Raab, M, Engelhardt, H
JournalJournal of Marriage and Family
Volume76
Issue2
Pagination300-318
KeywordsAdult children, Health Conditions and Status, Healthcare, Other
Abstract

This research traced the process of caregiver selection among adult children longitudinally, investigating how transitions to parent care were influenced by previous constellations of caregiving costs and commitments within sibling groups. The authors used data from 6 waves (1998-2008) of the Health and Retirement Study, selecting a sample of families (N=641 parents comprising N=2,452 parent-child dyads) in which they observed at least 1 adult child becoming a caregiver to a previously self-sufficient parent. Among cost-related factors, this transition was predicted primarily by between-sibling differences in previous geographical distances to the parent and, to a lesser extent, competing demands in work and family spheres. The indicators for caregiving commitments showed the importance of reciprocity, path dependency, and parental expectations as motivational forces affecting the process of caregiver selection among adult children. Gender effects revealed the primacy of the mother-daughter tie, as daughters were overrepresented only in transitions to mother care. National Council on Family Relations, 2014.

Notes

Export Date: 21 April 2014 Source: Scopus

URLhttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84895111373andpartnerID=40andmd5=b5d6e1e1085bb9c47de88a8bfa7d1720
Endnote Keywords

Aging/Caregiving/Intergenerational transfers/Parent-child relationships/Siblings/Transitions

Endnote ID

999999

Citation Key8035