Millions of children are being raised solely
by their grandparents, with numbers continuing to climb as the opioid
crisis and other factors disrupt families. New research being presented
at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2018 National Conference
& Exhibition shows that caregivers who step up to raise their
grandchildren are overcoming unique challenges to manage just as well as
biological and adoptive parent caregivers.
The study abstract, "Grandparents Raising Grandchildren: Are They Up
to the Job?" will be presented on Monday, Nov. 5, at the Orange County
Convention Center in Orlando, Fla. The study is the first to examine a
nationally representative sample of children and directly compare
households where children are being raised by their grandparents with
those being raised by their parents.
"A large and increasing number of mothers and fathers aren't able to
meet the responsibilities of parenthood, prompting their own parents to
take on the primary caregiver role for their grandchildren," said senior
author Andrew Adesman, MD, FAAP, Chief of Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics for Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York. "Although
these children are more likely to have endured one or more adverse
childhood experiences and the grandparents themselves often face extra
health and socioeconomic hurdles, our findings suggest they appear to be
coping well."
The researchers analyzed and compared 2016 National Survey of
Children's Health data from 44,807 parent-led households and 1,250
grandparent households. They determined that caregivers raising their
grandchildren were more likely to have a greater number of physical and
mental health problems, have household incomes at or below the federal
poverty line, have lower levels of education, and be single.
In addition, the grandchildren they were raising were more likely to
become angry/anxious with transitions, lose their temper and have other
behavioral issues.
"This was not surprising, since we know that children in non-parental
care are likely to have experienced more adverse childhood experiences
and have an increased risk of behavioral problems as a result," said
abstract co-author Sarah Keim, PhD, Principal Investigator at Nationwide
Children's Hospital.
However, Keim said, grandparents and parents showed no difference
when asked if the child "does things that really bother" them, is
"harder to care for" than peers, or if they "felt angry with this
child." In fact, grandparents and parents did not differ on most
measures of parent coping, parenting stress, or caregiver-child
interactions when stratified by child health and child age.
The study also found that a substantial proportion of both
grandparent caregivers (31 percent) and parent caregivers (24 percent),
reported that they did not have anyone "to turn to for day-to-day
emotional support with parenting."
"Given that children being raised by their grandparents may pose
greater behavioral challenges, and that nearly a third of the parenting
grandparents reported they had no one to turn to for day-to-day
emotional support with parenting, pediatricians and other health
professionals caring for 'grandfamilies' must be mindful of these issues
and be ready to refer families to counseling when needed, as well as
refer them to supports groups locally and online," Dr. Adesman said.
Reference:
American Academy of Pediatrics. "Grandparents: Raising their children's
children, they get the job done." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 2 November
2018. .
Courtesy: ScienceDaily
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