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Older adults in sub-Saharan Africa living with children and grandchildren
116
Citations
55
References
2005
Year
Independent LivingFamily StructureFamily StrengtheningSocial Determinants Of HealthPopulation AgingPovertyPublic HealthDemographic ChangeGeriatricsNuclear HouseholdsElderly CareSocial GerontologyIntergenerational RelationsPopulation HouseholdHealth SurveysGlobal HealthSociologyOlder AdultsDemographyIntergenerational RelationMedicine
Using data from Demographic and Health Surveys, we examine the composition of households containing older adults in 24 countries of sub-Saharan Africa, with a focus on those living with children and grandchildren. Overall, 59 per cent live with a child and 46 per cent with a grandchild. Men are more likely to live in nuclear households and women in extended households and alone. Regression analyses show that individual-level determinants of household composition differ by sex. For example, living with children and grandchildren is tied to living with a spouse for men, but for women the effect is either not significant or in the opposite direction. Households with an older adult and a grandchild, but no adult children, are common. Usually the adult child lives elsewhere, though about 8 per cent of older adults live with a grandchild who has at least one deceased parent. Older adults are more likely to be living with double-orphans in countries with high AIDS-related mortality.
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