ABSTRACT
This study explores the experiences of adult children as they transition their functionally and/or cognitively declining aging parents from independent living to supervised housing. A qualitative grounded theory approach was used to chronicle the experiences of adult children as their caregiving responsibilities intensified and their parents' health declined. Purposive, snowball sampling was used to enlist adult children (n = 16) who were in the process of transitioning an aging parent from an independent living situation to one providing assistance with everyday care and tasks. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted and designed to follow a pattern of increased frailty of the parent(s) and escalating involvement of the adult child. Two major themes emerged from the data: Changing places and everlasting love. Adult children began to intervene when cognitive or physical declines compromised the safety and well-being of the older adult and began to assume responsibility for day-to-day needs. As disabilities intensified, adult children relied on siblings, friends, social services, and health care providers to assist in planning and implementing caregiving responsibilities. Deep respect and abiding love of the aging parent(s) sustained the adult child throughout the caregiving experience.
Subject(s)
Adult Children/psychology , Aging/psychology , Parents/psychology , Patient Transfer , Activities of Daily Living , Adult , Aged , Female , Grounded Theory , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative ResearchABSTRACT
Human consumption is depleting the Earth's natural resources and impairing the capacity of life-supporting ecosystems. Humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively over the past 50 years than during any other period, primarily to meet increasing demands for food, fresh water, timber, fibre and fuel. Such consumption, together with world population increasing from 2.6 billion in 1950 to 6.8 billion in 2009, are major contributors to environmental damage. Strengthening family-planning services is crucial to slowing population growth, now 78 million annually, and limiting population size to 9.2 billion by 2050. Otherwise, birth rates could remain unchanged, and world population would grow to 11 billion. Of particular concern are the 80 million annual pregnancies (38% of all pregnancies) that are unintended. More than 200 million women in developing countries prefer to delay their pregnancy, or stop bearing children altogether, but rely on traditional, less-effective methods of contraception or use no method because they lack access or face other barriers to using contraception. Family-planning programmes have a successful track record of reducing unintended pregnancies, thereby slowing population growth. An estimated $15 billion per year is needed for family-planning programmes in developing countries and donors should provide at least $5 billion of the total, however, current donor assistance is less than a quarter of this funding target.