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Kane, Rosalie A.; And Others – Gerontologist, 1988
Nurses (N=30) employed in nursing homes were trained as Geriatric Nurse Practitioners and then implemented their new clinical roles as direct employees of the original facility. Results showed the nurses, their directors, and administrators perceived the nurses as having positive effects on resident outcomes, but described difficulties in…
Descriptors: Geriatrics, Institutionalized Persons, Nurses, Nursing Homes

Wentowski, Gloria J. – Gerontologist, 1985
Nineteen older women gave their perceptions of great-grandmotherhood. They modeled their behavior on their earlier role of grandmother, but age and lack of geographic proximity restricted their ability to carry it out in the same way. Great-grandmotherhood was significant for symbolic and emotional rather than social and instrumental reasons.…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Females, Older Adults, Role Models

Scharlach, Andrew E. – Gerontologist, 1994
Examined potential benefits and costs of having both work and elder care responsibilities, based on interviews with 94 employed caregivers. For most respondents, negative aspects of combining work and caregiving roles were outweighed by positive aspects, such as sense of accomplishment, enhanced interpersonal relationships, and opportunities to…
Descriptors: Employment, Family Caregivers, Frail Elderly, Older Adults

Campbell, Ruth; Brody, Elaine M. – Gerontologist, 1985
Conducted a three-generation study of women's attitudes toward gender-appropriate roles and filial responsibility. United States gender-role attitudes were more egalitarian than those of the Japanese. In both countries, all three generations agreed that care of the elderly is a family responsibility, but attitudes toward filial responsibility were…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cross Cultural Studies, Females, Helping Relationship

Schwartz, Arthur N.; Vogel, Mark E. – Gerontologist, 1990
Evaluated role expectancies in essential nursing services of nursing home professional and relatives of residents. Although findings revealed significant agreement between groups, areas existed where families deemed themselves responsible for task but staff expectations were incongruent. Provides analysis of this process and discusses steps to…
Descriptors: Congruence (Psychology), Expectation, Family Attitudes, Institutional Personnel

Skaff, Marilyn M.; Pearlin, Leonard I. – Gerontologist, 1992
Examined loss of identity resulting from engulfment in caregiver role among 555 adult children and spouses caring for Alzheimer patient. Loss was more common among spouses, females, and younger caregivers. Limited social contact and lack of social roles were related to greater loss of self. Found loss of self associated with lower…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Alzheimers Disease, Family Caregivers, Role Perception

Jendrek, Margaret Platt – Gerontologist, 1994
Interviewed 114 grandparents. Found three major grandparent roles: custodial, living with grandchild, and day-care roles. Found that custodial grandparents often obtained that relationship because of severe problems in nuclear family. Day-care grandparents provided regular help to grandchild's nuclear family. Decision to provide care was often…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Child Rearing, Day Care, Decision Making

Morgan, Leslie A. – Gerontologist, 1980
Relatively few widows enter the labor force, but this is due to the high percentage who are already working. Results suggest a probable overestimation of the usefulness of jobs as role replacements or income producers for widows. (Author)
Descriptors: Coping, Displaced Homemakers, Employed Women, Females

Keating, Norah C.; Cole, Priscilla – Gerontologist, 1980
The impact of the husband's retirement on the wife's conception of three aspects of her role as housewife was studied. Retired teachers and their wives were surveyed. The shift for women was toward increased accommodation to their husbands' needs. Negative changes were offset by increased opportunities for nurturing of spouse. (Author)
Descriptors: Gerontology, Home Management, Homemaking Skills, Interpersonal Relationship

Prentis, Richard S. – Gerontologist, 1980
This study of white-collar working women investigates their views toward retirement with emphasis on variables contributing to attitudes and behavior. Findings indicate inadequate preparation for retirement and suggest areas of research related to contemporary female work patterns which may assist practitioners and policy-makers to correct the…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Older Adults, Perception

Kennedy, Gregory E. – Gerontologist, 1990
Survey responses of 704 college students revealed that majority had at least 1 grandparent and some had 8 or more. Students identified degree of closeness with closest grandmother and grandfather. Students' perceptions of grandparent and grandchild roles were generally positive, indicating affection and respect for grandparents. Found differences…
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Influences, Family Relationship, Grandparents

Brown, Diane R.; And Others – Gerontologist, 1992
Used data from community-based sample of African Americans to investigate association between gender and depressive symptoms among 148 older African Americans. Found no gender difference in overall level of depressive symptomatology. Findings suggest that lack of gender difference was attributable to similarities in risk factors related to…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Blacks, Child Rearing, Depression (Psychology)

Noonan, Anne E.; Tennstedt, Sharon L. – Gerontologist, 1997
Examines the relationship between meaning in caregiving (positive beliefs about the caregiving situation and the self as caregiver) and the psychological well-being of 131 informal caregivers to community-residing frail elders. Results indicate that meaning in caregiving explained a significant portion of the differences in depression and…
Descriptors: Caregiver Attitudes, Caregiver Role, Caregivers, Depression (Psychology)