Newswise,
September 16, 2015 — Single grandparents raising grandchildren are more
vulnerable to poor physical and mental health than are single parents,
according to a study recently published in Current Gerontology and
Geriatrics Research.
These
caregivers may be at greater risk for diminished physical capacity and
heightened prevalence of depression, researchers found.
Researchers
at Georgia State University and the University of Toronto
found that solo grandparents caring for grandchildren fare worse than single
parents across four critical health areas: physical health, mental health,
functional limitations and health behaviors.
Their research looked at a sample
of solo grandparents from 36 U.S. states using the 2012 Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System, a survey from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
“The
burden of chronic illness among solo grandparents was very worrying,” said
study co-author Deborah Whitley, a professor of social work in the Andrew Young
School of Policy Studies’ School of Social Work at Georgia State.
“One in four
solo grandparents reported they had diabetes and one in five had chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma. One in six had a heart attack. With
this level of illness, it is not surprising that 32 percent reported that their
physical health was not good more than one week in the past month.”
An
estimated 920,000 American children are being raised by solo grandparents
without a parent in the home.
“Many
solo grandparents are quite elderly, yet they are raising some of the nation’s
most vulnerable children with shockingly limited resources,” said co-author
Esme Fuller-Thomson, a professor in Toronto's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of
Social Work and the Institute for Life Course & Aging.
“One-quarter of solo
grandparents were over age 70. More than a quarter of these households reported
incomes of less than $15,000 per year. And more than one-third were raising
more than one child, and half the children were less than 12 years of age.”
As
America celebrates Grandparents Day on Sept. 13, the authors believe their
findings signal the need for policies that will foster the delivery of health
services that effectively address the physical and mental health needs of this
population.
They
point to health professionals from multiple disciplines as an important
resource in reducing their health problems and helping to increase their
physical and emotional capacity to support and nurture the grandchildren in
their care.
A
copy of the study, “Health Characteristics of Solo Grandparent Caregivers and
Single Parents: A Comparative Profile Using the Behavior Risk Factor
Surveillance Survey,” can be downloaded athttp://www.hindawi.com/journals/cggr/2015/630717/.
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