With an increasing number of elders moving into nursing homes, the shift from family to nursing home care calls for an exploration of caregiving decision-making in urban China. This study examines how a rapidly growing aging population, the one-child policy, and economic reform in urban China pose unprecedented challenges to the country's ingrained tradition of family caregiving. It presents interviews of matched elders and their children from a government-sponsored nursing home in Shanghai and analyzes the decision-making process of institutionalization. This book offers fresh insight into the evolving culture and arrangements of caregiving in contemporary Chinese society, illuminating the diverse needs for long-term care of Chinese elders-the world's largest aging population-in the coming decades.



Autorentext
Lin Chen is Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Work at Fudan University, China.

Inhalt
1. Introduction: Too Great a Task: Taking Care of Aging Parents 2. The Setting: The Nursing Home and the Sociocultural Caregiving Context in Urban China 3. The Theoretical Lens: Conceptualizing the Decision-Making Process 4. Unexpected Reality: Etiology of Family Caregiving 5. Swinging Pendulum: A Power Play 6. Children Parenting: First and Last Adventure 7. The End of an Era: A New Dialogue
Titel
Evolving Eldercare in Contemporary China
Untertitel
Two Generations, One Decision
EAN
9781137544407
ISBN
978-1-137-54440-7
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
11.04.2016
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
2.7 MB
Anzahl Seiten
213
Jahr
2016
Untertitel
Englisch