Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons

Cynthia R Collins Loyola University New Orleans, College of Social Sciences/School of Nursing, New Orleans, LA, USA Abstract: Emerging practice research on filial sources of health care support has indicated that there is a growing trend for sons to assume some responsibility for the health care n...

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Main Author: Collins CR
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2014-11-01
Series:Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/men-as-caregivers-of-the-elderly-support-for-the-contributions-of-sons-peer-reviewed-article-JMDH
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spelling doaj-7a4026e3d7954accad1f592ae90180cd2020-11-24T23:36:21ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare1178-23902014-11-012014default52553119117Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sonsCollins CR Cynthia R Collins Loyola University New Orleans, College of Social Sciences/School of Nursing, New Orleans, LA, USA Abstract: Emerging practice research on filial sources of health care support has indicated that there is a growing trend for sons to assume some responsibility for the health care needs of their aging parents. The purpose of this work is to propose that outcomes observed through a secondary analysis of data from a previous mixed methods research project, conducted with a sample of 60 elderly women residing in independent living centers, supports this concept in elder care. The present study is a retrospective interpretation utilizing the original database to examine the new question, “What specific roles do sons play in caregiving of their elderly mothers?” While daughters presently continue to emerge in existing health care studies as the primary care provider, there is a significant pattern in these data for older patients to depend upon sons for a variety of instrumental activities of daily living. As the baby-boomers age, there is more of cohort trend for their families to be smaller, adult daughters to be employed, and for adult children to be more geographically mobile. These factors may combine to make health care support networks more limited for the current aging population, challenging the elderly and their health care providers to revisit the cultural gender norms that are used to identify caregivers. Keywords: sons as caregivers, male caregivers, aging parents, filial support, informal caregivers http://www.dovepress.com/men-as-caregivers-of-the-elderly-support-for-the-contributions-of-sons-peer-reviewed-article-JMDH
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Collins CR
spellingShingle Collins CR
Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare
author_facet Collins CR
author_sort Collins CR
title Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
title_short Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
title_full Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
title_fullStr Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
title_full_unstemmed Men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
title_sort men as caregivers of the elderly: support for the contributions of sons
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare
issn 1178-2390
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Cynthia R Collins Loyola University New Orleans, College of Social Sciences/School of Nursing, New Orleans, LA, USA Abstract: Emerging practice research on filial sources of health care support has indicated that there is a growing trend for sons to assume some responsibility for the health care needs of their aging parents. The purpose of this work is to propose that outcomes observed through a secondary analysis of data from a previous mixed methods research project, conducted with a sample of 60 elderly women residing in independent living centers, supports this concept in elder care. The present study is a retrospective interpretation utilizing the original database to examine the new question, “What specific roles do sons play in caregiving of their elderly mothers?” While daughters presently continue to emerge in existing health care studies as the primary care provider, there is a significant pattern in these data for older patients to depend upon sons for a variety of instrumental activities of daily living. As the baby-boomers age, there is more of cohort trend for their families to be smaller, adult daughters to be employed, and for adult children to be more geographically mobile. These factors may combine to make health care support networks more limited for the current aging population, challenging the elderly and their health care providers to revisit the cultural gender norms that are used to identify caregivers. Keywords: sons as caregivers, male caregivers, aging parents, filial support, informal caregivers 
url http://www.dovepress.com/men-as-caregivers-of-the-elderly-support-for-the-contributions-of-sons-peer-reviewed-article-JMDH
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