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African Americans in the middle.


Survey tells how blacks balance parent care and other issues

Are African Americans feeling the squeeze when caring for aging parents in the face of other responsibilities? Not according to an AARP (formerly known as the American Association of Retired Persons American Association of Retired Persons: see AARP.) July 2001 study. The report, In the Middle: A Report on Multicultural Boomers Coping With Family and Aging Issues, looked at challenges related to "sandwich-generation boomers"--a segment of the population ages 45-55 who are caught between aging parents and children younger than 21.

Of the 404 black respondents, eight out of 10 indicated that they do not feel stressed because they are balancing the needs of their family and elderly relatives. In fact, 63% indicated they can "comfortably handle all of my family responsibilities." This is particularly interesting since 26% of African American respondents had four or more children vs. 18% of the general population.

"This AARP study not only shows that the `self-help' tradition remains a central part of African American life, but also highlights the critical role that the extended family plays in African American households," asserts Eddie N. Williams, president of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, in a statement. The study also reveals that African Americans are more likely than whites, Hispanics, and Asians to rely on their friends, neighbors, co-workers, parents, adult children, brothers and sisters, other relatives, and the church for assistance with caregiving. Adds Dr. Margaret C. Simms, vice president for research at the Joint Center, a nonprofit public policy research group in Washington, D.C., and a BE Board of Economists member, "The findings provide a snapshot of how many African Americans are coping with various caregiving responsibilities and a much clearer picture of the subgroups that face the most challenges."
Six out of 10
African Americans
can manage family matters

Family Responsibilities

... can not handle them all.            6    5   10    8    8
... just able to handle them.          20   19   24   19   23
... comfortably handles all of them.   73   75   63   71   67
Prayer helps
African Americans cope

Faith or prayer   62   62   68   63   54
The church        42   40   51   46   41
African Americans rely on
friends and family for support

Friends, neighbors, co-workers   30   29   33   29   31
Parents                          26   25   29   26   28
Adult children                   30   30   32   30   24
Siblings                         47   45   52   52   50
Other relatives                  30   29   37   29   34

[] Total

[] White

[] African American

[] Hispanic

[] Asian
COPYRIGHT 2001 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Brown, Monique R.
Publication:Black Enterprise
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2001
Words:404
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