地理分布与老年人福祉

Suzanne Bianchi, Kathleen M. McGarry, Judith Seltzer
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引用次数: 8

摘要

也许老龄化人口面临的最大问题是医疗保健费用的上升,特别是医疗保险和医疗补助的费用。这笔费用的主要组成部分是长期护理。目前,对未婚(主要是丧偶)母亲的照顾大部分由成年子女提供。提供家庭照顾在很大程度上取决于家庭成员的地理分布。在本研究中,我们为成年子女及其大龄未婚母亲的地理分布提供了初步证据。已婚、为人父母和受过高等教育的成年子女同居的可能性较小,而那些没有工作或只从事兼职工作的人以及黑人和西班牙裔成年子女同居的可能性更大。亲密关系在已婚父母中更为常见,但在受过高等教育的孩子中则不那么常见。当我们观察一波数据收集和下一波数据收集之间的转换(间隔2年)时,大约一半的成年子女住在两个时间点都超过10英里的地方,不到四分之一的人住在两个时间点都在10英里以内,8%的人在两个时间点都是总统。在17%的转变中,大约一半的变化导致成年子女和母亲之间的距离更远,一半的变化使他们更亲近。两代人的需求很可能反映在这些转变中。事实上,母亲的健康与大多数转变并没有太大关系,如果有的话,年龄较大的母亲与50岁出头的母亲相比,距离往往更大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Geographic Dispersion and the Well-Being of the Elderly
Perhaps the largest problem confronting our aging population is the rising cost of health care, particularly the costs borne by Medicare and Medicaid. A chief component of this expense is long-term care. Much of this care for an unmarried (mostly widowed) mother is currently provided by adult children. The provision of family care depends importantly on the geographic dispersion of family members. In this study we provide preliminary evidence on the geographic dispersion of adult children and their older unmarried mother. Coresidence is less likely for married adult children, those who are parents and the highly educated and more likely for those who are not working or only employed part time and for black and Hispanic adult children. Close proximity is more common for married children who are parents but less common for the highly educated. When we look at transitions between one wave of data collection and the next (a 2-year interval), about half of adult children live more than 10 miles away at both points, a little less than one quarter live within 10 miles at both points, and 8 percent are coresident at both points in time. Among the 17 percent who make a transition, about half of the changes result in greater distance between the adult child and mother and half bring them into closer proximity. The needs of both generations are likely reflected in these transitions. In fact, a mother’s health is not strongly related to most transitions and if anything, distance tends to be greater for older mothers relative to those mothers in their early 50s.
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