E-Briefing Aug. 25, 2000
A NEW LOOK AT THE OLD: GRANDPARENTS & AGING
When you think grandma or grandpa, do you see wrinkles and
rocking chairs? With Grandparents Day coming up on Sunday Sept.
10, you might want to rethink that stereotype. The National
Survey of American Households indicates the average age of a
first-time grandparent is 47. And don't forget the stamina of
"Survivors" contestant Rudy Boesch, the politically incorrect
72-year-old who proved popular enough to make it to the show's
final four. This week's e-briefing from the University of
Cincinnati examines grandparenting and aging in the United States
and around the world. Will Baby Boomers wield enough influence to
displace youth worship? What is the state of grandparenting in
today's highly mobile society? Who is living the longest?
Table of contents
1. Grandparents: the stats
A. 60 million and growing
B. Aging patterns around the world
C. Greatness on the rise
D. Grandparents as care-givers
2. Focus on the family
A. Kinship keepers
B. Strong families ties in Appalachia
C. Real life story: Johari's grandma and grandpa
D. Real life story: Heather's grandma
3. Social trends
A. Gray as beautiful?
B. Beware of the 'burbs
C. The rise of cyber-grandparenting
D. Social Security: change isn't necessarily better
E. Age-friendly houses
4. Aging around the world
A. Japan's holiday
B. Mounting problems for Asia
C. Losing respect for the aged
D. Respect your elders (many still do)
5. Web sites on aging/grandparenting
1. GRANDPARENTS: THE STATS
A. 60 MILLION AND GROWING
Approximately 31 percent of the U.S. population -- 60 million
people -- are grandparents, according to figures from Global
Starch Worldwide, a global marketing research firm. That
number promises to increase as more and more Baby Boomers become
grandparents. By 2010, the ranks of grandparents are expected to
swell to 80 million. The top five activities grandparents
share with grandchildren are eating together (dining in or dining
out), watching a TV comedy, a sleep-over, shopping for clothes,
or enjoying sports or exercise together, according to an AARP
survey.
"We tend to think of grandparents as old folks with false
teeth and gray hair, sitting in rocking chairs. The age of 47
today is not what 47 was a couple of generations ago," says
Margaret Hollidge, senior program coordinator for AARP. "We're
healthier, more active and better educated. For the first time
ever, the 2000 census contained questions specifically for
grandparents raising grandchildren." contact:
212-434-2560
B. AGING PATTERNS AROUND THE WORLD
The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that the Japanese
have the longest life expectancy of any nation studied. The
organization studied 191 countries and reported an average life
expectancy of 74.5 years in Japan. At the other end of the scale,
Sierra Leone had the shortest life expectancy at 25.9 years. WHO
experts said the AIDS epidemic was primarily responsible for the
low rate in Sierra Leone and other sub-Saharan African nations.
The organization also tracks population trends across nations.
According to WHO statistics, countries with low birth rates and
good medical care will soon have huge populations of elderly.
These include Spain and Italy which are expected to be the
world's "oldest countries" by 2050 according to WHO.
Source: http://www.popin.org/po
p1998/8.htm
C. GREATNESS ON THE RISE
UC historian Terri Premo, who developed a course on women and
aging, said: "Not only will more people survive long enough to
become grandparents, but increasingly more of them will also
join the ranks of great-grandparents and even great-great
grandparents," she says. Premo adds that in the future, the role
of care-giver will be reciprocated by the grandchildren, as they
take care of their aging grandparents. "It seems likely that a
more complex and possibly richer set of relationships will result
for men and women across many generations." contact:
513-556-6612
D. GRANDPARENTS AS CARE-GIVERS
While it's true that many older adults will require continuing
care from their adult children, according to the U.S. Census
Bureau, a significant portion of grandparents give plenty of care
themselves. About 4 million children lived in a grandparent's
home in 1996, nearly double the 2.3 million who did in 1980. Of
those 4 million, more than one-third did not have a parent living
with them. Based on years of regional child-care planning
experience, Susan Kettmann, author of "The Twelve Rules of
Grandparenting: A New Look at Traditional Roles and How to Break
Them," predicts the numbers of grandparents serving as full-time
child-care providers will continue to rise. She said these
figures have risen steadily in the last five years, and the
number of grandparents raising grandchildren is expected to
double in the next five years. contact: Susan Kettmann,
916-874-1776
2. FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
A. KINSHIP KEEPERS
"Over the river and through the woods" reminds us that
grandparents have long been a center of family life, but as the
new century dawns, there is an even greater family focus for
grandparents, according to Diane Marcus, UC professor of social
work and an expert on aging. Today's grandparents are acting as
"the keepers of the family" more than ever before. "They are
contributing enormously and derive a lot of pleasure from the
family. They provide emotional assistance, tangible support and
intangible support. And they are thrilled to be able to do that."
"I don't think that the level of grandparents' commitment has
changed, and I don't think grandparents love their grandchildren
more now than they used to, but they do have many more
years of free time," she says. "Very often when people retire
today, they still feel strong and able, and so they can do more
than they used to." She adds that family size is smaller and
grandparents have fewer grandchildren vying for their attention.
contact: 513-556-4630
B. STRONG FAMILIES TIES IN APPALACHIA
University of Cincinnati anthropologist Rhoda Halperin says
intergenerational relationships are the key social relationship
in the Applachian community. As a result, "it is absolutely taboo
to put a grandparent or a loved on in a nursing home. It is the
equivalent of a death sentence." Halperin says grandparents and
other elderly relatives play crucial roles in raising children,
running communities, providing safety nets for problems, as well
as the initiatives for heritage preserving projects. contact:
513-556-5777
C. REAL LIFE STORY: JOHARI'S GRANDMA AND GRANDPA
Grandparenting today is perhaps most intense and "hands-on" for
those grandparents who are regularly involved in the care of
their grandkids. An example: The grandparents of 4-year-old
Johari Jackson, Gayle and Dr. Alvin Jackson of Fremont, Ohio,
have shared daily care of their grandson with Johari's maternal
grandparents and his parents. The Jacksons are committed to
helping out, so that Johari's parents -- their son, Attiba, and
his fiancee, Jessica Contreras -- can both concentrate on
education. With their assistance, Johari's dad earned his
bachelor's degree at University of Cincinnati in June and began
medical school at UC this fall. Jessica is finishing up
nursing school. Says Gayle, who will turn 50 soon, "I really
didn't expect to be a grandparent at this age...We just focus on
education and once you do that, it's not hard to know what else
you have to do."
D. REAL-LIFE STORY: HEATHER'S GRANDMA
When you're a grandparent raising a grandkid, there's a certain
emotional tug of war that goes on, admits Mary Sue Cheeseman, a
53-year-old who is raising her sixth-grade granddaughter,
Heather, in Cincinnati. "At the beginning, you walk around scared
to death you will have to do this for the rest of your life. At
the same time, you're scared to death you won't get to," says
Cheeseman, assistant senior vice president for development and
alumni at the UC Medical Center.
"For us, we're in a fortunate position," says Cheeseman,
describing her role as a care-giving grandparent in a comfortable
financial situation. "It's turned out to be nothing but a gift.
It's certainly nothing we set out to do...but she's been one of
the best things that's ever happened to us. She's helping to keep
us young, even though you can't see it from the outside."
contact: 513-558-3863
3. SOCIAL TRENDS
A. GRAY AS BEAUTIFUL
As Baby Boomers swarm into old age, will they turn the tide of
our youth-obsessed culture? Will they make "Old is beautiful" the
norm? Margaret Voelker-Ferrier, coordinator, UC's fashion
design program, and a former fashion forecaster for Visual
Merchandise Magazine, says that an appreciation for "gray" beauty
will run in tandem with our youth culture, although it won't
replace the youth culture. Baby Boomers, by their sheer numbers,
will force a celebration of gray beauty.
They'll make aging more acceptable, says Voelker-Ferrier, who
pointed to new gray hair-coloring as early proof of what's to
come. "L'Oreal has a new 'warm-blonde gray,' and two silver
grays. It's saying, 'We've earned our gray hairs...but make them
beautiful.'" contact: 513-556-5041
B. BEWARE OF THE 'BURBS
One of the biggest myths about aging Americans is that they're
all in nursing homes, says Ruth Anne Van Loon, UC assistant
professor of social work and an expert on aging issues. The truth
is that more older people are "aging in place," staying where
they have been for years. For Baby Boomers who have fed the
expansion of the suburbs, that may raise some real problems as
they age, says Van Loon. "It is much easier to supply and provide
services for the elderly in urban areas, rather than in the
suburbs." contact: 513-556-4628
C. CYBER-GRANDPARENTING ON THE RISE
Steve Barsh, CEO of iGrandparents.com, predicts the Web will play
an ever-larger role in enriching relationships between
grandparents and grandchildren. Baby Boomers and more mature
generations are the fastest growing segment online today at a
time when large geographic distances are common between family
members. Barsh said that 40 percent of people over 50
have a computer at home compared with 29 percent in 1996. The
amount of time Americans over 50 spend online is 47 percent
higher than the average for all other age groups. Presently,
40,000 individual grandparents visit iGrandparents.com in a
months' time. Barsh said that "Tough Subjects" message board,
where users can post personal queries and advice related to the
grandparent role, is the most popular part of the grandparents'
site.
contact: via Jim Shaud, 610-828-2900, ext. 106
D. SOCIAL SECURITY: CHANGE NOT NECESSARILY FOR THE
BETTER
With the presidential election coming up, the Republicans are
talking about allowing a portion of the funds funneled into
Social Security to be invested in private sector accounts by
individual workers. Diane Marcus, UC professor of social work and
an expert on aging issues, has concerns about privatizing Social
Security in any way. "Social Security was begun to fight poverty.
It's a system that applies to rich and poor, but people who are
poor need the stability of a system they know will be there for
them. If someone retires when the stock market is not doing well,
it can make quite a difference, and private investors don't
always invest wisely." If privatization is enacted, there will be
a massive need to educate Americans on wise investment
strategies, Marcus says. contact: 513-556-4630
E. AGE-FRIENDLY HOUSES
According to Wolfgang Preiser, UC professor of architecture, 99
percent of housing is not built to be accessible for the disabled
or elderly. Yet, most elderly want to remain in their own homes.
"It's the most desirable thing in terms of their economics,
independence and continuity of social and family ties."
Paradoxically, home builders -- even in the southeast and
southwest regions that market to mature populations -- aren't
adopting simple and inexpensive techniques that would allow
America's aging to remain in their homes. These simple design
guidelines include single-level homes (no sunken living rooms or
bilevel structures), hard floors, open-room layouts, wider doors,
entryway ramps, handrails in the bath, and counters that can be
adjusted to varying heights. "The design changes we're talking
about cost little and could be an enormous selling point," said
Preiser, author of many books on improving design, including
"Design Intervention: Toward a More Humane Architecture."
contact: 513-556-6743
4. AGING AROUND THE WORLD
A. JAPAN'S HOLIDAY
While the United States has Grandparents Day, the Japanese have
the Day to Respect Old People, which is a national holiday and is
a much bigger deal than the U.S. version. It falls on Sept. 15
and is called "Keiro No Hi," according to Noriko Fujioka-Ito, UC
Japanese language instructor who has lived in the United States
for 11 years. The holiday is filled with visits to grandparents,
sometimes with gifts, and includes a feast. contact:
606-647-7951
B. MOUNTING PROBLEMS FOR ASIA
While the U.S. faces mounting concerns about Social Security and
other social services meeting the needs of a growing elderly
population, many Asian countries are facing the difficulties of
an even more rapid growth in the older population, says Roger
Selya, UC professor of geography and an expert in Asian studies.
"Aging will be even more of a problem for Japan, Taiwan and
China than it is for us," he says. The primary cause is the
increased life expectancy and the past emphasis on birth control,
which reduced population growth rates to below replacement level.
"Although any demographer could have told the governments of East
Asia what the results would be, no one really anticipated the
massive social and economic changes which accompanied the
reduction in fertility," says Selya. "In East Asia, except for
Japan, they lack a comprehensive Social Security system and elder
care network." In Taiwan, several years ago, the mayor of
Taipei City, Chen Shui-bian, now president of the Republic of
China, promised a $265 a month stipend to every person over age
65, but the plan had to be dropped within six months because it
was bankrupting the government. contact: 513-556-3423
C. LOSING RESPECT FOR THE AGED
Up until recently, East Asian cultures tended to have a greater
respect for the elderly than their Western counterparts and aimed
for a three-generation "family ideal" with the oldest son, his
parents, and his children living under one roof. UC geography
professor Roger Selya, an expert in Asian studies, says that's
changing radically. Modernization, mobility, urbanization and
greater income created a more Western life-style and made nursing
homes a thriving industry in places such as Japan and Taiwan. At
one point, Japan even began building nursing homes on the
west coast of the United States. Now, Selya says the elderly are
more likely to face neglect. "In China, when the one-child per
family policy was introduced, the state promised to take care of
the aged, but now given the pressures of restructuring the
economy, "there is a question whether they will be able to
fulfill this promise," says Selya. contact: 513-556-3423
D. RESPECT YOUR ELDERS (MANY STILL DO)
Despite growing concern that Americans don't appreciate or value
this country's elderly population, anthropologist Rhoda Halperin
says disrespect for the elderly is a rare phenomenon
worldwide and throughout history. "In most cultures of the world
-- prior to industrialization and prior to urbanization -- the
elderly were revered. It is more common in history for elderly
people to be decision-makers, conflict-mediators, mentors, than
for elderly people to be 'pink-slipped' or discarded." That's
because nuclear families are not the norm; extended,
multigenerational families are much more common. Halperin also
noted that in many cultures, aging benefits women the
most. "As women age, they take on more power, especially after
they finish their reproductive years." contact:
513-556-5777
5. WEB SITES ON AGING/GRANDPARENTING
A. Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics
http://www.
aoa.dhhs.gov/agingstats/default.htm
B. National Council on Aging
http://www.ncoa.org/
C. American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
http://www.aarp.org/
D. AARP Grandparent Information Center
http://www.
aarp.org/confacts/programs/gic.html
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