Usually it isn't an option that they decide not to take. Without an ample welfare net, the family in general has a far more important role to the individual. I think that this basically is because of necessity, not only because off the differences in culture. In the West people don't think to have children in order there to be someone to care for them when they are old. You simply make savings for your retirement.What I much admire about some non-Western cultures is their general belief in and practice of not placing their aged family members in long-term care homes. — FrankGSterleJr
In the past, the use of formal long-term care services by Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians, age 65 and older, has been shown to be substantially lower than that of non-Hispanic Whites. Cultural preferences, language differences, and lower income may explain some of the limited use of services.
However, the use of formal services has changed gradually over time for Blacks as anti-discrimination laws and public funding have provided greater access to nursing homes and home health services. Data from the 1999 National Nursing Home Survey (NNHS) indicate that, while nursing home utilization rates have declined for Whites, utilization rates have increased for Blacks and now surpass those of Whites.
Although data on the use of formal services by Asians, Hispanics, and Native Americans are limited, a study by Himes et al. provides evidence that nursing home utilization rates are much lower among these groups than among Whites or Blacks. Using 1990 U.S. Census data on persons age 60 and older, their study shows that nursing home use was 3.3% for Whites, 3.1% for Blacks, 2.3% for Native Americans, 1.6% for Hispanics, and 1.2% for Asians. Lower rates for Asians, Hispanics, and Native Americans may reflect a cultural preference for family caregiving.
Usually it isn't an option that they decide not to take. Without an ample welfare net, the family in general has a far more important role to the individual. I think that this basically is because of necessity, not only because off the differences in culture. — ssu
That people can live at their own home would be also one very important thing. We all hope that when the end comes, we still will be sharp in mind and have some ability to take care of ourselves. In truth, being totally dependent on others is not an ending I would hope to have. The question is what kind of life is worth living. Today the most crucial thing is to plan and act before you are in a situation where you simply cannot be at home and basically someone else has to decide where you stay. People can have only plans what to do, but not the will to implement them.Honestly, to me, the best choice is for the old loved ones to spend their days with family — Caldwell
We all hope that when the end comes, we still will be sharp in mind and have some ability to take care of ourselves. — ssu
People can have only plans what to do, but not the will to implement them. — ssu
They are lucky to be able to do this. But many in their old age have a lot less to work on. I guess, we should add that, when old age comes, often the old people are at the mercy of their family members, not the other way around.I remember my great-uncle, a former ambassador and a career diplomat, decided with his wife that simply staying at home, going to the supermarket was starting to be too exhausting and hence they went looking for a care home and found a nice one. Then they invited the whole family and relatives to see their now living quarters, basically a normal small flat with their furniture from their old home. I think their success was to make the change before either of them was in too frail condition. — ssu
The real cultural divide happens with how large is the "family", where do people draw the line in seeing as an obligation to help the elder person in the family. The natural thing even today in the West is that it's the responsibility of the direct offspring, the children, to help at least in some way, if possible. Yet to help an aunt or uncle or a more distant relative starts to be more rare, unfortunately. The focus on the nuclear family has eroded the larger network that earlier families have provided, at least in where I live (in Finland). This still can differ from family to family.They are lucky to be able to do this. But many in their old age have a lot less to work on. I guess, we should add that, when old age comes, often the old people are at the mercy of their family members, not the other way around. — Caldwell
The focus on the nuclear family has eroded the larger network that earlier families have provided, at least in where I live (in Finland). This still can differ from family to family.
Add to this that many don't have children and a lot more are single than before, and you have a genuine problem of basically loneliness, which comes to be a bigger problem at old age. — ssu
What I much admire about some non-Western cultures is their general belief in and practise of not placing their aged family members in long-term care homes. — FrankGSterleJr
But, as clearly evidenced by the many needless care-home resident Covid-19 deaths, big business does not always know or practice what's best for its consumers. — FrankGSterleJr
But a corporate criminal stealing for years and doing magnitudes greater harm and damage may only lose a year or a few years, and in many cases preserve his life and prospects for a return to life and well-being, even if he has destroyed the lives, prospects, and well-being of thousands of others. — tim wood
We call those politicians around here... — creativesoul
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