Continuing to Care

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A01=Karen Ann Conner
Adult Day Care
Adult Day Care Centers
Assisted Living
Assisted Living Facilities Residents
Author_Karen Ann Conner
blended family dynamics
Care Receiver
caregivers
caregiving
Category=JBSP4
Category=JHBK
Centenarian Population
Congregate Meal Program
demographic aging
Elder Abuse
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
facilities
family
Family Care Providers
Family Caregivers
Family Caregiving
Family Caregiving Activity
intergenerational caregiving responsibilities
intergenerational support
kinship obligations
Long Term Care
Long Term Care Insurance
Long Term Care Setting
long-term
LTC
minority elder care
Modern Families
nurse
Nursing Home
Nursing Home Care
Nursing Home Staff
OLDER POPULATION
parish
Parish Nurse
Parish Nurse Program
Provide Parent Care
providers
receiver
setting
social policy analysis
Team Approach

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815328896
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 2000
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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"Continuing to Care?" describes the challenges of an aging America and changing family system. Caregiving has always been a primary obligation of the family based on an informal intergenerational contract that specifies "who owes what to whom." This system of intergenerational reciprocity has been a central feature of American family life and has formed the foundation for successful social programs such as Social Security and Medicare that support older Americans.
Recent changes in the American family threaten the intergenerational family contract. Changing definitions of family, increasing divorce and remarriage rates, the establishment of blended families, and dramatic changes in the age structure and intergenerational composition of the family affect the ability of this important social unit to continue to provide care to its members.
Change in the American family system raises some difficult personal and social questions. What is the obligation of adult children to elderly frail parents? Are we expected to provide care ourselves or is supervising care provided by others an acceptable alternative? Do the same rules apply in the case of step parents? What is a childs obligation to a long absent father? Can Americans continue to juggle responsibility for their children with the demands of careers and the needs of aging parents? How much longer will we do it? And what will society do if we decide to stop?
These questions need to be addressed as we reexamine our families caregiving role. "Continuing to Care?" brings these questions into the public forum for consideration and debate.

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