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Kinship, Responsibility and Care for Elderly People

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2008

Graham Allan
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Southampton, Southampton SO9 5NH, England.

Abstract

As is now widely recognised, children, but especially daughters, are often involved in providing their elderly infirm parent(s) with care and tending. This paper seeks to examine two aspects of this care provision. First, how it relates to the nature of kinship solidarity between parents and adult children during other phases of their lives. More specifically, it will be suggested that while children are usually thought to bear some responsibility for their parents' welfare, actually providing support can none the less entail a far more extensive commitment than is normally expected of them. Yet the paradox is that such caring often seems to intensify feelings of responsibility rather than generate a sense of moral worth amongst those most highly involved. The second part of the paper examines some of the factors responsible for this. It will argue that the responses of carers to their situation need to be understood in terms of the immediate social environment in which they find themselves. In particular, what needs to be recognised is the sense of individual, rather than shared or collective, responsibility which develops.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

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References

NOTES

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27 In the words of Ruth Cowling, a contributor to the Briggs and Oliver collection: ‘Looking back, I see that what began as a pleasant duty became an intolerable burden’ (Ibid p. 6).

28 An issue that has not been researched to any extent is the role that inheritance plays in either encouraging children to provide care for parents or making parents feel less obligated for the support they are given. This question of inheritance is certainly likely to become more pertinent as increasing numbers of elderly people have houses and other substantial assets to leave. Indeed little or nothing is known about what parents receiving care regard as a ‘fair’ distribution of their estate. Should it be split equally between all their children, or should the child providing them with most support in their old age be rewarded differentially? Either way it could be that under these circumstances matters of inheritance lead to some tension and even feuding between siblings.

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40 Doreen Hore, one of the contributors in the Briggs and Oliver volume, expressed this more graphically: ‘Indeed, it is circumstances, not vocation, that condemns us to bottom-washing’ (Briggs, A. and Oliver, J., op. cit. p. 80).Google Scholar

41 ‘Time spent on themselves can be seen as frivolous in their own eyes’ (ibid. p. 112). See also E.O.C., op. cit.

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46 Graham Crow's one-time biology teacher was the source of this particular illustration of human cruelty.

47 ‘It gradually dawned on me that my life had become more and more centred around my mother. I realised with horror that I was a clock watcher. Whatever I might want to do had to be disregarded to meet her needs. I looked for support and found none. My mother relied solely on myself.’ Lilian McSwceney in Briggs, and Oliver, , op. cit. p. 102.Google Scholar

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56 Nissel, and Bonnerjea, , op. cit. p. 36.Google Scholar

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58 ‘You're just assumed to be a “natural carer”; somehow you will magically find all the necessary physical and emotional resources to cope. It's funny when you consider the effort they go to to give new mothers advice how to handle babies - no one tells you how to handle incontinent, senile parents that spread faeces over the walls and wander off at night. Because it's not talked about, you think you should “know” and then in addition to all the other pressures, you feel guilty because you can't cope with it.’ (Oliver, Judith, quoted in E.O.C., op. cit. p. 13.)Google Scholar

59 As Val Hollinghurst has written: ‘One of the hardest problems I have found in caring for my mother has been coming to terms with the “tangled web” of my own emotions: love, which naturally grows when you tend someone in need, mixed in with fear, resentment and guilt.’ (Briggs, and Oliver, op. cit., p. 15.)Google Scholar

60 Ibid. p. 113.