PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Nearly half of U.S. grandchildren live within 10 miles of a grandparent

2025-07-07
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. — New, more precise estimates show most American grandchildren live close to a grandparent, with implications for families’ well-being and for how much time and money generations share.

Cornell researchers’ analysis found that nearly half of U.S. grandchildren (47%) live within 10 miles of a grandparent. Of those, significant numbers live even closer: 21% live between 1 and 5 miles, and 13% live within a walkable distance of 1 mile. As many grandchildren live within 1 mile of their grandparents as live 500 miles or more away.

Families living closer to grandparents tend to have lower socioeconomic status, the researchers found, with parents who on average have less education and lower incomes, and are less likely to be married. Those households help grandparents more, and receive more help from grandparents, but distance does not affect the amount of money that families exchange.

“Substantial numbers of grandchildren live very close to a grandparent,” said Rachel Dunifon, the Rebecca Q. and James C. Morgan Dean of the College of Human Ecology. “Additionally, our results reveal that the characteristics of families living very close to grandparents differ from the characteristics of those living just a little farther away.”

Dunifon is the co-author of “Grandchildren’s Spatial Proximity to Grandparents and Intergenerational Support in the United States,” published June 3 in Demographic Research, with Olivia Healy, now an assistant professor of economics at Elon University.

Most prior research examined less detailed measures of distance between grandparents and grandchildren, measuring “close” proximity as within 25-30 miles, and therefore not identifying significant variation among the large number of children who live within this range. The work also provides more up-to-date analysis than previous estimates of grandchild-grandparent proximity, which date to the 1990s.

The new study leveraged a nationally representative U.S. sample from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, a long-running longitudinal survey including detailed geographical location data measured at the census block level, which allowed for a very precise measurement of distance between grandparents and grandchildren. The researchers analyzed nearly 2,000 households with at least one child under 18 at home and at least one living grandparent living elsewhere.

“This more fine-grained spatial data reveals sizeable variation at the closest range of the geographic scale, including details missed in analyses where those living within larger geographic distances were grouped together,” Dunifon said.

As might be expected, families living closer together spend more time together. But the rate is much higher among families that live within 1 mile of each other than for those just 5 or 10 miles farther away.

“This suggests that family members living in very close proximity are highly embedded in each other’s lives,” Dunifon said. “This is a group worthy of further study, to understand how they select these living arrangements and what the implications are for family functioning and well-being.”

The researchers speculated that grandparents who live far away from their grandchildren may make up for the limited time spent together by giving them more money – but results showed that was not the case. The authors speculate that this may be because families who live farther from grandparents have higher incomes and more education, and likely are more self-sufficient.

Overall, grandparents give more time and money to grandchildren’s families than they receive. Among households 1 to 5 miles apart, for example, grandparents on average gave 186 hours of help and $800 of financial support, while receiving 104 hours and $500. Prior research that did not consider grandchildren had calculated equal transfers.

Because a significant amount of the time grandparents contribute likely involves child care, the researchers said, their more detailed proximity analysis potentially has implications for the well-being of all three generations. Grandparents living nearby could benefit grandchildren by providing stable child care; their parents, who might need support while working; and the grandparents themselves, since there is evidence that spending time with grandchildren improves well-being.

“We highlight the significant numbers of grandchildren living in very close proximity to their grandparents,” Dunifon said, “and demonstrate that geographic distance, at a very fine scale, is linked to important time investments to and from households.”

-30-

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study demonstrates low-cost method to remove CO₂ from air using cold temperatures, common materials

2025-07-07
Researchers at Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (ChBE) have developed a promising approach for removing carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere to help mitigate global warming. While promising technologies for direct air capture (DAC) have emerged over the past decade, high capital and energy costs have hindered DAC implementation. However, in a new study published in Energy & Environmental Science, the research team demonstrated techniques for capturing CO₂ more efficiently and affordably using extremely cold air and widely available porous sorbent materials, expanding future ...

Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) welcomes 13 students to prestigious Summer Fellowship program

2025-07-07
UTICA, NY – MMRI is thrilled to welcome 13 undergraduate students to its highly esteemed 2025 Summer Fellowship program. For ten weeks, these Summer Fellows will study in the laboratories of MMRI’s principal investigators (PI) gaining invaluable scientific research experience. This rigorous and competitive program selects students based on academic excellence and demonstrated drive to partake in cutting-edge research programs that include areas of cardiovascular disease biology, autoimmunity and autism. “We ...

Mass timber could elevate hospital construction

2025-07-07
Picture a hospital and you might imagine concrete, stainless steel or plastic. But University of Oregon researchers hope to make wood — often overlooked in health care facilities — more commonplace in those settings. Exposed wood, they’ve found, can resist microbial growth after it briefly gets wet. During their study, wood samples tested lower for levels of bacterial abundance than an empty plastic enclosure used as a control. “People generally think of wood as unhygienic ...

A nuanced model of soil moisture illuminates plant behavior and climate patterns

2025-07-07
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Any home gardener knows they have to tailor their watering regime for different plants. Forgetting to water their flowerbed over the weekend could spell disaster, but the trees will likely be fine. Plants have evolved different strategies to manage their water use, but soil moisture models have mostly neglected this until now. Researchers at UC Santa Barbara and San Diego State University sought a way to move beyond simple on/off models to capture the nuanced ways that plants manage water stress. To ...

$2.6 million NIH grant backs search for genetic cure in deadly heart disease

2025-07-07
Fourteen million people worldwide suffer from enlarged hearts, or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a genetic disease that thickens the heart’s walls, making it harder for the organ to pump blood — but many of them don’t know it. The disease is often undiagnosed, despite being the most common genetic heart disease and having contributed to the sudden deaths of numerous high-profile athletes, including players in the NFL, NBA and NHL. Now, Sherry Gao, Presidential Penn Compact Associate Professor in Chemical ...

Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program changed drastically when anxiety was added as a qualifying condition

2025-07-07
PITTSBURGH, July 7, 2025 — Within months of Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program adding anxiety as a qualifying condition, that diagnosis quickly rose to become the most common for cannabis certifications, according to a study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh and Johns Hopkins University. The study was published today in Annals of Internal Medicine.   To date, 39 states have medical cannabis programs, with chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) historically being the most ...

1 in 5 overweight adults could be reclassified with obesity according to new framework

2025-07-07
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 7 July 2025    Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, threads, and Linkedin         Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms ...

Findings of study on how illegally manufactured fentanyl enters U.S. contradict common assumptions, undermining efforts to control supply

2025-07-07
Illegally manufactured fentanyl kills a significant number of people in the United States and Canada every year. Since the emergence of modern heroin markets in the late 1960s, controlling supply has been associated with important reductions in opioid use and harms in several cases worldwide. But these efforts depend on understanding the dominant drug-trafficking routes. In a new analysis, researchers developed an index to compare U.S. counties’ proportion of large seizures against their proportion of the national population. Their findings counter ...

Satellite observations provide insight into post-wildfire forest recovery

2025-07-07
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: JULY 7, 2025 Contacts:  Audrey Merket, NSF NCAR and UCAR Science Writer and Public Information Officer amerket@ucar.edu 303-497-8293  David Hosansky, NSF NCAR and UCAR Manager of Media Relations hosansky@ucar.edu 720-470-2073 Using satellite observations to evaluate forest recovery following a wildfire could be an innovative, cost-efficient way to assess the effectiveness of land management practices, according to research published earlier this year.  Scientists at the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research ...

Three years in, research shows regional, personal differences in use of 988 lifeline

2025-07-07
Who is most likely to use the 988, the national suicide and crisis lifeline launched on July 16, 2022?  Two studies led by researchers at the NYU School of Global Public Health find both geographic differences and personal factors that shape where people might seek help during mental health crises. For instance, people in western and northeastern states are more likely to have called 988 than those in the South; similarly, Democrats are more inclined to say that they would use 988 than Republicans. In addition, more than 10 percent of calls came from veterans. The findings, published in JAMA Network ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mechanochemically modified biochar creates sustainable water repellent coating and powerful oil adsorbent

New study reveals hidden role of larger pores in biochar carbon capture

Specialist resource centres linked to stronger sense of belonging and attainment for autistic pupils – but relationships matter most

Marshall University, Intermed Labs announce new neurosurgical innovation to advance deep brain stimulation technology

Preclinical study reveals new cream may prevent or slow growth of some common skin cancers

Stanley Family Foundation renews commitment to accelerate psychiatric research at Broad Institute

What happens when patients stop taking GLP-1 drugs? New Cleveland Clinic study reveals real world insights

American Meteorological Society responds to NSF regarding the future of NCAR

Beneath Great Salt Lake playa: Scientists uncover patchwork of fresh and salty groundwater

Fall prevention clinics for older adults provide a strong return on investment

People's opinions can shape how negative experiences feel

USC study reveals differences in early Alzheimer’s brain markers across diverse populations

300 million years of hidden genetic instructions shaping plant evolution revealed

High-fat diets cause gut bacteria to enter brain, Emory study finds

Teens and young adults with ADHD and substance use disorder face treatment gap

Instead of tracking wolves to prey, ravens remember — and revisit — common kill sites

Ravens don’t follow wolves to dinner – they remember where the food is

Mapping the lifelong behavior of killifish reveals an architecture of vertebrate aging

Designing for hard and brittle lithium needles may lead to safer batteries

Inside the brains of seals and sea lions with complex vocal behavior learning

Watching a lifetime in motion reveals the architecture of aging

Rapid evolution can ‘rescue’ species from climate change

Molecular garbage on tumors makes easy target for antibody drugs

New strategy intercepts pancreatic cancer by eliminating microscopic lesions before they become cancer

Embryogenesis in 4D: a developmental atlas for genes and cells

CNIO research links fertility with immune cells in the brain

Why do lithium-ion batteries fail? Scientists find clues in microscopic metal 'thorns'

Surface treatment of wood may keep harmful bacteria at bay

Carsten Bönnemann, MD, joins St. Jude to expand research on pediatric catastrophic neurological disorders

Women use professional and social networks to push past the glass ceiling

[Press-News.org] Nearly half of U.S. grandchildren live within 10 miles of a grandparent