kinship support
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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 83-83
Author(s):  
Britney Webster ◽  
Alexandra Jeanblanc ◽  
Gregory Smith ◽  
Frank Infurna

Abstract Custodial grandfamilies (CGF) comprise a small, diverse group of the US population which can make samples difficult to recruit and retain. Two online RCT studies (S1 & S2) for CGF used a variety of recruitment strategies with varying success. S1, for grandmothers (GM) only, successfully recruited from Facebook (47.95%) and community flyers (17.73%). S2, dyadic study for GM and adolescent grandchildren (AGC), recruited through emails to high school counselors (43.29%) and community (30.94%) and professional (17.13%) kinship support organizations. The advantages of online RCTs for hard-to-reach populations include expedited administration, buffering against social distancing, nationwide enrollment (S1-42 states; S2-43 states), and generalizability of findings. Challenges of online RCTs are establishing rapport and building trust with participants who are not comfortable with technology and designing screenings to identify false participants. Overall, these studies highlight the advantages of an online RCT, especially for hard-to-reach populations like custodial grandfamilies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 435-436
Author(s):  
Chen Hongzhou ◽  
Vivian Lou ◽  
Hongzhou Chen

Abstract Background and aim: 80% of childless older adults in rural China choose to ageing-in-place (AIP) rather than moving to residential facilities, regardless the fact that they were financially constrained, scarily supported and some were physically disabled. This research explores the reason why AIP were prevailing preferred. Research design and Method: A qualitative method adopting constructive grounded theory approach was utilized in this research. 20 in-depth interviews were conducted among childless rural residents (aged 60 to 83 years old, 8 of them were over 75 years old) in Yunnan, one of the most economically disadvantaged provinces in China. Data was transcript and coded line-by-line, a in Vivo coding strategy was engaged to capture local language and meanings. Results: A phrase - ‘there’s someone at home’ - was used by rural childless older adults to explain their AIP decision, which demonstrating the role of kinship relations. Three sub-themes were emerged regarding to the phrase: 1) reciprocity, as the support were mutual and predictable; 2) justified conflicts, as older adults and ‘someone’ managing the support relation with subtle conflict; 3) unspoken agreement, as childless older adults being constrained by filial piety when negotiating for further support. All of sub-themes were related with sense of certainty. For participants who were over 75, growing old were “naturally” related with decreased social support. The daily-based kinship support and sense of certainty was particularly important among childless older adults who would like to choose AIP but still questioning the sustainability of self-reliance at an uncertain rural place.


2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 187-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivy Forsythe-Brown ◽  
Robert Joseph Taylor ◽  
Linda M. Chatters ◽  
Ishtar O. Govia ◽  
Niki Matusko ◽  
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2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 584-603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Lo Presti ◽  
Fulvia D’Aloisio ◽  
Sara Pluviano

Our aim was to investigate some predictors and outcomes of family-to-work enrichment (FWE) via a mixed-method approach. We sampled 447 married employees of an Italian factory. Survey results from Study 1 showed that emotional support from family positively predicted FWE, while this latter mediated the associations between the former on one side, and work engagement and life satisfaction on the other. Moreover, extra-household support directly associated positively with life satisfaction. Evidence from 20 anthropological in-depth interviews (Study 2) returned a more complex picture, highlighting the gendered role of partners inside couples, the importance of kinship support, the sense and the value of filiation and parenthood in their connection with job roles, the complex and continuous interplay between family and life domains. In combination, results from both studies stressed the importance of family support; additionally, evidences from Study 2 suggested that FWE could be better understood taking into account crossover dynamics and the compresence of work-to-family enrichment and conflict. In sum, these studies contributed to shed light on FWE dynamics, an under-researched topic in Italy, whose knowledge could be of great empirical and practical value.


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