Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-sxzjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T13:32:32.138Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Childlessness at the end of life: evidence from rural Wales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2009

G. CLARE WENGER*
Affiliation:
Emeritus Professor, Bangor University, Bangor, Gwynedd, UK.
*
Address for correspondence: G. Clare Wenger, Tir Gwelyog, Gwaenysgor, Flintshire, Wales, LL18 6EW, United Kingdom. E-mail: gcwenger@btinternet.com

Abstract

After the spouse, children are the most likely source of informal support for an older person when the frailties of advanced old age create the need for help. Childlessness may thus be seen as particularly a problem for older people. In general, to compensate for the lack of children, childless people develop closer relationships with available next-of-kin and non-kin. Despite this, in times of need they are likely to find themselves with inadequate informal support. Using data from the Bangor Longitudinal Study of Ageing, this article explores the consequences of childlessness among persons aged 85 years or more living in rural Wales. The results indicate that by the time they reach old age, childless people have adapted to their situation and developed expectations consistent with being childfree. They have closer relationships with collateral kin, friendships are important and a high value is placed on independence. Nevertheless, unless they die suddenly or after a short acute illness, almost all of them enter residential care or a long-stay hospital at the end of their lives. It is also shown that the situation of childless people varies greatly and depends on several factors, particularly marital status, gender, social and financial capital, and on the person's earlier investment in the strengthening of next-of-kin and non-kin networks.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2009 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Chapman, N. J. 1989. Gender, marital status, and childlessness of older persons and the availability of informal assistance. In Peterson, M. D. and White, D. L. (eds), Health Care of the Elderly: An Information Sourcebook. Sage, London, 277328.Google Scholar
Chappel, N. L. and Badger, M. 1989. Social isolation and well-being. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 44, 3, S169–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Choi, N. G. 1994. Patterns and determinants of social service utilization: comparisons of the childless elderly and elderly parents living with or apart from their children. The Gerontologist, 34, 3, 353–62.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Connidis, I. A. and McMullin, J. A. 1992. Getting out of the house: the effect of childlessness on social participation and companionship in later life. Canadian Journal on Aging/Revue Canadienne du Vieillissement, 11, 1, 370–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dykstra, P. A. 1995. Network composition. In Knipscheer, C. P. M., de Jong Gierveld, J., van Tilburg, T. G. and Dykstra, P. A. (eds), Living Arrangements and Social Networks of Older Adults. VU University Press, Amsterdam, 97114.Google Scholar
Jerrome, D. and Wenger, G. C. 1999. Stability and change in late-life friendships. Ageing & Society, 19, 1, 661–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kivett, V. A. and Learner, M. 1980. Perspectives on the childless rural elderly: a comparative analysis. The Gerontologist, 29, 6, 708–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mugford, S. and Kendig, H. L. 1986. Social relations: networks and ties. In Kendig, H. L. (ed.), Ageing and Families: A Social Networks Perspective. Allen and Unwin, Boston, Massachusetts, 3859.Google Scholar
O'Bryant, S. L. 1985. Neighbors' support of older widows who live alone in their own homes. The Gerontologist, 25, 3, 305–10.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pickard, S. 1995. Living on the Front Line: A Social Anthropological Study of Old Age and Ageing. Avebury, Aldershot, UK.Google Scholar
Rubinstein, R. L., Alexander, B. L., Goodman, M. and Luborsky, M. 1991. Key relationships of never-married, childless older women: a cultural analysis. Journal of Gerontology, 46, 5, S270–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Strain, L. A. and Payne, B. J. 1992. Social networks and patterns of social interaction among ever-single and separated/divorced elderly Canadians. Canadian Journal on Aging Aging/Revue Canadienne du Vieillissement, 11, 1, 3153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Townsend, P. 1957. The Family Life of Old People. Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Wenger, G. C. 1984. The Supportive Network: Coping with Old Age. George Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Wenger, G. C. 2001. Ageing without children: rural Wales. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 16, 1, 79109.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wenger, G. C. and Burholt, V. 2001. Differences over time in older people's relationships with children, grandchildren, nieces and nephews in rural North Wales. Ageing & Society, 21, 5, 567–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wenger, G. C., Dykstra, P., Melkas, T. and Knipscheer, C. P. M. 2007. Social embeddedness and late life parenthood: community activity, close ties and support networks. Family Issues, 28, 11, 1419–56. (Special issue, Part 2, Multiple Meanings of Childlessness in Late Life: Findings from Seven Societies).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wenger, G. C., Scott, A. and Patterson, N. 2000. How important is parenthood? Childlessness and support in old age in England. Ageing & Society, 20, 2, 161–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar