Moving In Together
Bringing Parents Into Your Home Or Moving In With Them
When Parents Move in With Their Adult Kids
Multigenerational households save money but endure conflicts
Emily Brandon | U.S. News & World Report |10.06.08
Twenty-somethings who move back in with their parents after college are often lamented as "boomerangs." But increasing numbers of seniors are moving in with their adult children and grandchildren as well. Over 3.6 million parents lived with their adult children in 2007, according to recently released U.S. Census Bureau data, up 60 percent from 2000. "It's a return to much closer intergenerational ties than we saw through much of the 20th century," says Stephanie Coontz, a professor of history and family studies at Evergreen State College and author of The Way We Really Are: Coming to Terms With America's Changing Families.
A trouble-free arrangement? Not so much. Here's how to navigate the potential land mines of multiple generations sharing the same home. >> More
Parents Living With Children In Old Age
Joseph Roundtree Foundation
Policy Studies Institute, UK | 11.97
This in-depth study of 24 families where frail, older parents are living with their adult children examines why and how the decision is made to share a house and how they feel about the arrangement. Here are a few highlights. The full PDF is available for download below.
The parents in this study were mostly very old and frail widows with poor health and limited mobility who had moved to live in a daughter’s household.
The move to live with family was usually precipitated by illness and the family had little time to consider the implications.
These daughters and sons were motivated by a strong sense of duty to care for the parent, and although most wanted to carry on, nearly all found the shared household arrangement stressful. None knew how long family care would continue: a few children saw it as a stage before institutional care, others for as long as they could manage, while most expected it to be until the parent died. >>Download PDF
Finding a Good Home
Christine Larson | U.S. News | 11.19.06
Soon after Jeanne Erdmann's father passed away in 1995, it became clear that her mother, then 85, would one day need a new home. Although her mom, Florence Greco, was still in relatively good health, "she didn't like living by herself anymore," says Erdmann, 53, a science writer who lives in Wentzville, Mo. So six years ago, Erdmann and her husband invited Greco, who lived in a nearby county, to move in. "She didn't like being here at first," says Erdmann. >>More