5 research outputs found
Filial obligations to elderly parents: a duty to care?
A continuing need for care for elderly, combined with looser family structures prompt the question what filial obligations are. Do adult children of elderly have a duty to care? Several theories of filial obligation are reviewed. The reciprocity argument is not sensitive to the parent–child relationship after childhood. A theory of friendship does not offer a correct parallel for the relationship between adult child and elderly parent. Arguments based on need or vulnerability run the risk of being unjust to those on whom a needs-based claim is laid. To compare filial obligations with promises makes too much of parents’ expectations, however reasonable they may be. The good of being in an unchosen relationship seems the best basis for filial obligations, with an according duty to maintain the relationship when possible. We suggest this relationship should be maintained even if one of the parties is no longer capable of consciously contributing to it. We argue that this entails a duty to care about one’s parents, not for one’s parents. This implies that care for the elderly is not in the first place a task for adult children
The ethics of dead participants: policy recommendations for biobank research
Respecting people’s consent choices for use of their material and data is a cornerstone of biobank ethics. Participation in biobanks is characteristically based on broad consent that presupposes an ongoing possibility of informing and interacting with participants over time. The death of a participant means the end of any interaction, but usually not the end of participation. Research on causes of death makes biobank material from deceased participants extremely valuable. But as new research questions and methods develop over time, the question arises whether stored biobank material from deceased persons still can be used on the basis of their broad consent. In this paper, we discuss policies for postmortem use of biobank material, including consent options, proxy consent and criteria for limitation of types of use and duration of storage. We conclude that the interests of participants in biobank research are best served by asking at enrolment if and how the biobank material may be used after death. We state that the use of biobank material from deceased participants should be delimited both by their consent and by the prevailing broad consent choices of living participants.
Biobanks also need to inform participants at enrolment about the duration of storage of biobank material or at minimum have procedures for deciding how long material will be stored for and for which purpose. For older collections, in the absence of such information or consent options, relevant authorities should decide
The implications of today’s family structures for support giving to older parents
There is considerable debate about the effects of today’s family structures
on support arrangements for older people. Using representative data from
The Netherlands, the study reported in this paper investigates which sociodemographic
characteristics of adult children and their elderly parents, and
which motivations of the adult children, correlate with children giving practical
and social support to their parents. The findings indicate that the strongest sociodemographic
correlates of a higher likelihood of giving support were: having
few siblings, having a widowed parent without a new partner and, for practical
support, a short geographical distance between the parent’s and child’s homes.
Single mothers were more likely to receive support than mothers with partners,
irrespective of whether their situation followed divorce or widowhood. Widowed
fathers also received more support, but only with housework. A good parent-child
relationship was the most important motivator for giving support, whereas subscribing
to filial obligation norms was a much weaker motivator, especially for
social support. Insofar as demographic and cultural changes in family structures
predict a lower likelihood of support from children to elderly parents, this applies
to practical support, and derives mainly from increased geographical separation
distances and from the growing trend for parents to take new partners. Social
support is unlikely to be affected by these changes if parents and children maintain
good relationships.
Cohort Profile Update: The HUNT Study, Norway
In the HUNT Study, all residents aged ≥20 years in the Nord-Trøndelag region, Norway, have been invited to repeated surveys since 1984-86. The study data may be linked to local and national health registries.
The HUNT4 survey in 2017-19 included 56 042 participants in Nord-Trøndelag and 107 711 participants in the neighbouring Sør-Trøndelag region.
The HUNT4 data enable more long-term follow-up, studies of life course health trajectories and within-family studies.
New measures include body composition analysis using bioelectrical impedance; a 1-week accelerometer recording; physical and cognitive testing in older adults; measurements of haemoglobin and blood cell counts, HbA1c and phosphatidylethanol; and genotyping.
Researchers can apply for HUNT data access from HUNT Research Centre if they have obtained project approval from the Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics, see [www.ntnu.edu/hunt/data]