Looking
over the results of a national survey on
attitudes about aging, released on Monday, I
groaned over some of the dopier questions.
(At what age did people experience their
first kiss? Not quite 15, on average. Who
cares?)
But there were some interesting
data on an issue of perennial interest:
older people moving in with younger family
members when they can no longer manage on
their own. This topic brings a reaction
hereabouts as predictable as summer
mosquitoes. Any discussion of living
facilities for old people brings
disapproving comments from someone
castigating adult children for not moving
parents into their own homes.
When I wrote about my father’s
first year in his continuing care retirement
community, for instance, a reader using the
name passyp extolled the multigenerational
households of yore. “When I hear lonely
parents say they’d never ‘impose’ on their
children by living with them, I just know if
those children made them feel welcome,
they’d gladly move,” he or she wrote.
My personal hypothesis, as I’ve
written before, is that our boomer
generation watched too many episodes of “The
Waltons.” I’ve also cited a favorite study
by two economists demonstrating that the
sharp drop in elderly widows moving in with
their children, beginning in the 1940s,
reflected not family selfishness but the
advent of Social Security. For the first
time, those checks allowed people who were
no longer working to maintain independent
households — and ever since, more of them
have.
I’ve also passed along research by
Zhanlian Feng, a Brown University
gerontologist who has described the
proliferation of nursing homes in China.
Construction continues apace, he told me
recently, despite Confucian expectations of
filial piety. There, as here, making living
arrangements for dependent elders has more
to do with industrialization, women in the
work force and expanded life spans than with
adult children’s alleged self-centeredness.
Now, here’s evidence from by Gallup
& Robinson, underwritten by Pfizer, the
pharmaceutical firm, suggesting once more
that the prospect of moving in with their
children doesn’t make aging parents’ hearts
leap with joy.
People in this sample of 1,017
online panelists, recruited to reflect 2010
census data, were asked whether they would
have a parent live with them. Of those ages
35 to 64, 53 percent answered yes. Only 43
percent of those over 65 were willing to
have a parent move in.
Asked the reverse question, about
willingness to live with a younger family
member “when I could no longer live on my
own,” the over-65 respondents sounded even
less enthusiastic. Only a quarter said yes;
34 percent said no. The largest group, 38
percent, said they weren’t sure, which seems
a rational response to a situation that
could be welcomed or feared, comfortable or
tense. (Find the survey here.)
I’ll caution that the survey
included just 178 people over 65,
proportionate to the national population but
not an enormous sample. And certainly some
families embrace multigenerational living or
turn to it for financial reasons. (If you’re
among them, we’d like to hear how it’s
working out.) If 25 percent of older adults
would move in with their families, that’s
hardly a negligible proportion.
In certain ethnic communities, too,
that arrangement remains the unchallenged
norm. Here’s a video visit with an extended
Pakistani family in Southern California, for
instance.
But I can’t find evidence of
widespread yearning among American elders to
move in with their children. Certainly, my
father has repeatedly made clear his
distaste for the idea. Without knowing it,
the Waltons were already on the precipice of
social change.
Good night, John-Boy.