WNY Family Magazine March 2020 | Page 26

THE SANDWICH GENERATION — by Michele Miller Squeezed Between Caring For Your Children & Your Aging Parents F or as long as there have been families, people have always had to find ways to take care of their aging relatives. In generations past, it was common for extended fami- lies to live in the same town, perhaps just a few blocks from one another. Every- one was able to help out when parents or grandparents needed care. Things are different today. In our highly mobile society, it is less common for children to remain in the town where they grew up. Rather than a large extend- ed family living in close proximity, we of- ten find family members scattered across the country, making a network of family support much more difficult. Add to this factor the trend for to- day’s couples to wait longer to have chil- dren and you can begin to see why the term “Sandwich Generation” was coined 26 WNY Family March 2020 in reference to people who are still car- ing for their children while also bearing the responsibilities involved in caring for their aging parents. In 1970, the average age of a wom- an having her first baby was 21.4 years. In 1990, statistics showed that women weren’t even marrying until the median age of 26.7 years. In 2017, the median age of a woman giving birth to her first child was 28 years, and the median age for women marrying rose to 27.4 years and 29.5 years for men. (Keep in mind that “median” means 50% of marriages occur at an age above that number; and 50% occur below.) Not included in these statistics are those who have a child but don’t actually marry. And, since 2000, 46 states and Washington, DC have experi- enced a rise in first-birth rates for women over age 35. According to the Pew Research Cen- ter, motherhood for college-educated women doesn’t start until women reach some level of career success in their thir- ties, with fully one-fifth not becoming mothers until they were at least 35 years old. So, what does this have to do with eldercare, you ask? The resulting trend in delayed mar- riage and childbirth has given rise to new generations of adults who will be caught in the squeeze between the needs of their growing children and their increasingly frail parents. And those parents are now living longer — the fastest growing seg- ment of the U.S. population is people over 85 years of age. That means elderly parents will need assistance over a longer period of time than ever before. There are actually new designations