Showing posts with label grandmother. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grandmother. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

China Requires Children to Care for their Aging Parents

 Dear GAA Blog Reader,

Do you think that your government should require children to care for their older parents?  Yes? No?    Well, China does!                              

In a Healthland Time.com article, the author says China’s government thinks so.  Why?  As the population of elderly in nearly every society starts to swell, such eldercare laws are becoming more common. But are they effective?
What kind of care and devotion is expected of adult children toward their aging parents? Not surprisingly, siblings can hold fiercely different positions about what they “should” do. Some make huge sacrifices of time and money to comfort and care for parents; others rarely show their faces even when parents pine for them. But if families can’t resolve these difficult issues, can governments do any better?

In China, a new law that went into effect this month requires children to provide for the emotional and physical needs of their parents, which includes visiting them often or facing fines and potential jail time. One woman who was found negligent in visiting her 77-year-old mother has already been charged under the Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly and was ordered to visit her mother at least once every two months, and on at least two national holidays a year.

Enforcing the law will certainly be challenging, and critics have raised the very real possibility that in an effort to alleviate some of the impending burden that 200 million people over the age of 60 represent for the Chinese government, the law may end up causing more familial strife and resentment toward elderly parents. While no government can legislate loyalty or love, more legislatures are finding it necessary to mandate responsibilities, especially those of the financial kind.
In Ukraine (and other former Soviet-bloc nations), says Katherine Pearson, a law professor at Penn State, children are “obliged to display concern and render assistance.” In practical terms, that translates to needy elderly being able to sue their children for financial support. And a sister can sue her brother for not paying his share of mom’s costs.

 Much closer to home, laws in 20 US states require family members, for the most part adult children, to support their financially needy relatives, which can include elderly parents who no longer have an income or disabled adult children who are unable to support themselves. Most of these statutes, which are among the original laws of the states, have not been in active use since the Great Depression. In fact, most states repealed them from the 1950s through ’70s when older people began reaping the benefits of Social Security and Medicare.

Since 1994, however, Pearson says lawsuits in Pennsylvania and South Dakota against adult children by a needy parent or a care provider like a hospital have required adult children to come up with the money for their parents’ care bills. Some nursing homes have used the laws to win judgments as high as $90,000 against adult children, says Pennsylvania elder-law attorney Jeffrey Marshall. “It’s a ‘gotcha’ law,” says Pearson, “because most people don’t know about it until after it goes wrong.”
Such statutes are a relic of the Elizabethan Poor Laws, which colonists from England introduced to America. They were enacted in the first half of the 20th century, at a time when it was more common for multigenerational families to live near each other, or even in the same house, and to be economically interdependent. Life expectancies were lower back then, however, so there were far fewer frail old people, and those few were usually cared for at home by a daughter.

The social revolutions of the 20th century changed this social landscape in the U.S. and in much of the world. Parents live much longer, often with chronic conditions for which they need medical care. Women as well as men are in the workplace, and adult children may live hundreds or even thousands of miles away from their parents. That’s what prompted the law in China; with so many of the younger generation seeking better employment and financial opportunities away from home, elderly parents are increasingly left behind to fend for themselves.

This collision of new realities with responsibilities to parents has struck even in Japan, a traditional Confucian society, where filial piety is a cherished value and the traditional role of a wife has been to care for her husband’s parents. But Japan has the world’s fastest aging population — nearly a quarter of the population is over 65, and in a sign that the silver wave is already washing over the nation’s shores, adult diapers are projected to outsell baby diapers by 2020, according to the Nikkei newspaper.
Huge numbers of caregivers are needed, but with traditional daughters-in-law now disappearing into the workforce, in 2000 the Japanese government created a universal long-term care program to help families pay for hired caregivers. And, despite the traditional reverence for elders, says AARP analyst Don Redfoot, women — many of them presumably daughters-in-law — lobbied against a provision that would have allowed the elderly to pay family members to care for them.

 More affluent European countries rely primarily on some sort of government support for eldercare, with varying degrees of potential family involvement. Norway provides universal long-term care to everyone. In France, the elderly receive a payment similar to Social Security, which increases according to the recipient’s income and care needs. In Germany, a social-insurance approach like Medicare helps pay for long-term care. Unlike in Japan, this money can be used to pay family members for care services.
But these insurance programs only provide financial support, and do little, if anything, to address what the Chinese call the “spiritual needs” of the old. China’s law, therefore, was intended to exert moral pressure on sons and daughters to attend to their parents — seeing retired parents, that legislation makes clear, is your job.

And what if that job becomes too burdensome, or even impossible to maintain? Even without laws, most children do feel some responsibility or even a positive wish to take care of their parents. The real problem, particularly in the U.S. and increasingly elsewhere, is that adult kids are caught between time, career, family and geographical demands that they can’t always resolve in favor of spending more time with grandma and grandpa.

That means that from China to South Korea to South Carolina, governments may create programs to mandate care for the elderly, but, says Lori Brown, a sociologist at Meredith College in North Carolina, they are often still isolated and alone. “And the most isolated elderly,” she says, “have the most depression, lower quality of life, and die earlier.”
 
If legislating such loneliness away isn’t the answer, what is? Some social programs reduce elders’ loneliness by visit from volunteers. Many children arrange for their parents to attend day programs for the elderly, where they will have the chance to interact with others and engage in activities to stimulate their social and cognitive skills. And they are increasingly hiring aides who not only can help older people perform daily tasks but serve as companions for them as well. In Japan, for example, companies that provide “companions” for the elderly are flourishing. Home Instead Senior Care’s Japanese franchises have grown at an average rate of over 10% since 2006. It’s no substitute for a child’s companionship, but the reality of current financial and social demands makes it an acceptable stand-in for many people. “We might not want to pass laws like the one in China, but we could certainly do with some awareness campaigns about caring for not only our family members who are older but everyone who is elderly,” says Brown. Especially if we remember that one day each of us will find ourselves in need of such societal support and attention.

 What do you think?  Please respond on our Blog.
Best, Susanne Paul for Global Action on Aging

 

 

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

China covers some 484 Million Citizens with a Pension Plan

Xinhua Web Editor, Mao Yaqing, reports that nearly 500 million Chinese are now covered by a pension plan.  The program extends to over 300 million urban Chinese and has doubled the percentage of those with pension coverage since 2007.  This is an outstanding achievement for the people of China. 
 
China's pension system covered 484 million people as of 2012.

"Gross revenues for social insurance funds totaled 2.85 trillion yuan (457.45 billion U.S. dollars) and gross expenditures reached 2.21 trillion yuan in 2012, 2.63 times and 2.8 times that of five years ago, respectively, the ministry said. Basic endowment insurance per capita has increased 86 percent compared with five years ago," according to the news account.

China's social insurance funds comprise five parts: basic endowment insurance for the elderly, basic medical insurance, unemployment insurance, work-related injury insurance and maternity insurance.

As the world's most populous country, China faces enormous challenges to support its current and future older citizens.  Only fifteen years ago, China was creating a fully developed pension program for its population. Now, the results can be seen for its urban citizens.   As in other nations, China must also face the needs of its citizens in the country-side where pensions appear more difficult to create, fund and distribute.

If you have first-hand knowledge of these developments, please share them with Global Action on Aging.   

Susanne Paul
Global Action on Aging

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

US Citizens: Stop ANY cuts to Medicare, Social Security or Medicaid


Roger Hickey, Co-Director of the Campaign for America's Future says we must act now!  Read this edited version of his post:

"Last night at the State of the Union speech, the President promised Republicans he wants to do 'entitlement reform' as part of a deficit deal. And he is still is still on record as willing to cut Social Security benefits for today’s seniors by imposing an inaccurate “chained CPI” formula --and to make unnamed Medicare cuts, in return for Republican support for more tax increases.

Contact your Senators and Representative today and tell them NO cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in any budget deal.

The "chained CPI" involves a change to the cost-of-living adjustment, which compounds over time, cutting the benefits of an average earner by $1,100. By the time that person is 85, the cut amounts to the equivalent of 24 weeks of groceries a year.

We’ve got to get them . .  to get them to stop using our social insurance programs as bargaining chips. . .  

That’s why we ask you to send a message to your representatives in Congress: Refuse to vote for any future budget deal that cuts Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid benefits.

And tell them you need to know they won’t vote for the chained CPI. Politicians run on the promise that they will protect the benefits of current beneficiaries, and the chained CPI is a betrayal of that promise.

It's a battle we've won before and can win again. But we need your voice. Contact your Senators and Representative today.

Sincerely,

Roger Hickey
Co-director, Campaign for America’s Future


Posted by Susanne Paul at Global Action on Aging

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Japanese Minister says Old Citizens cost too much!

Dear Global Action on Aging Friends,

The UK Guardian newspaper reports on Taro Aso, the new Japanese finance minister, who says that elder Japanese citizes are draining the country's finances (January 22, 2013).  He's quoted as saying, "The problem won't be solved unless you let them hurry up and die."  Aso also refers to people who receive end of life care as "tube" people who use up the country's resources.

The Japanese government recently reduced its welfare expenditure, a measure that will go into effect in April.  Japan is home to many old people, about 40% are over 65 years old.  (Many would consider this a success story for the nation.)  However, many elders live and die alone.

Is caring for elders a social obligation . . . or are older people excess human "baggage" for the society?  What do you think?  Please send in your comments.

Have a good day! 

Susanne Paul for Global Action on Aging

Friday, January 18, 2013

A Must Read Booklet on HIV and Older Persons

Dear GAA Friend,

ACRIA stands for the AIDS Community Research Initiative of America.  This organization has produced a widely read resource that helps older persons understand the risks of HIV AIDs in situations of unprotected sex.  If you are older, read this straight-talking helpful article about sex in old age. 

Here's the link:   http://www.acria.org/files/LFI_0.pdf

Please write to GAA about your reactions.  Did it make sense?  Would you follow ACRIA's suggestions?

In the meantime, have a good weekend!

Best, Susanne Paul at Global Action on Aging






Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Why Celebrate Thanksgiving Day?

Dear Reader,

On the fourth Thursday of November, many people in the US celebrate Thanksgiving and give thanks for the fall harvest.  Traditionally, families gather for a special meal that often includes a stuffed turkey, cranberry sauce, potatoes -- sometimes broccoli-- and other vegetables.  The feast usually ends with a pumpkin pie. In some places, religous or civil organizatons host a dinner for their members and open their doors to poor people in the neighborhood.  As poverty has sharply increased among adults and children in the US, many will have no holiday dinner this year.

What are people celebrating?  Since 1863 some  citizens have observed Thanksgving Day. However, not everyone celebrates. Beginning in 1970, Native Americans have observed a National Day of Mourning at Plymouth Rock, in Massachusetts. The Pilgrims' arrival set off the elimination of countless Native People or drove them off the land that they had settled and cultivated.  Many Native People see no reason to celebrate. 

The struggle for justice continues in the US.  What is happening in your country?  Do you have holidays that honor some and marginalize others?  Please share your information with us on our comment section. 

In the meantime, have a good week!

Susanne Paul for Global Action on Aging

Monday, October 15, 2012

No Place for Elders in Kuala Lampur

Adult children and other family members are increasingly abandoning their 60-years-plus elders who have been hospitalized, according to reporters Lim Wey Wen and Yuen Meikeng writing in The Star, on October 8, 2012.  Earlier in 2011, some 200 seniors in this Malaysian city were left behind.  Nearly all came from poor families.  Six months into 2012, over 250 older people had been left in the hospital following their discharge.  NGOs that run public shelters had already filled their beds earlier in the year.

Why is this happening?  Poverty in families and in public funding for older people underlies this terrible situation.  In the most recent data collected in 2004, about 675,000 older parents received no funding from their children. 

What is your situation?  Would your adult children or other family members help you financially if your resources were exhausted?  Please comment.

Thanks, Susanne Paul for Global Action on Aging

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

“Grandmother to Grandmother: New York to Tanzania”

In celebration of the 20th Anniversary of the United Nations International Day of Older Persons, AARP and the Fordham University Ravazzin Center on Aging hosted a Film Screening: “Grandmother to Grandmother: New York to Tanzania.”

The film documentary features the lives of grandmothers raising orphaned grandchildren in New York City and also in Tanzania. While seemingly worlds apart, these grandmothers came together in Tanzania and realizeed that their challenges and experiences were very much the same. The film highlights aging as a gendered experience, and the cultural life course trends that converge to create additional vulnerabilities in the lives of older women.

Globally, grandparents are increasingly raising their orphaned grandchildren. Parents are dying due to HIV/AIDs, drugs and violence. Grandmothers, already one of the most vulnerable group in terms of poverty, are relied upon to take care for children without adequate means.

One panelist stated that this global issue is gaining recognition across the world. In New York City, in particular, some low-income housing is designated for grandparents raising grandchildren on $10,000/year or below. The facility provides evening programs, counseling and building security. Grandmothers attend support group meetings that help them adjust to their new task as a primary caregiver and also to express their concerns with a supportive audience. One woman said, “I realize there are others just like me and I don’t have to be ashamed that my child wasn’t able to raise his child”.

A panel of experts on this global trend from New York and Tanzania also spoke. Rimas J. Jasin, Executive Director of Presbyterian Senior Services, discussed New York City’s attempts to alleviate poverty among grandparents raising grandchildren in some of the city’s most at-risk neighborhoods.

While discussing the slow evolution of social change and the changes necessary to strengthen the human rights of older persons, Modest J. Mero, Minister Plenipotentiary at the Permanent Mission of the United Republic of Tanzania to the United Nations said that “Development is a gradual process.”