Sentences with phrase «multigenerational households at»

Digging deeper with the help of data from Statistics Canada, we computed the share of multigenerational households at the municipal level in Toronto and Vancouver.

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John Martin, CEO of The Boomer Project, says that boomers lead more households than any other generation, and now they're at the helm, often reluctantly, of more multigenerational households than ever before.
To tap into cultural indicators of individualism, Grossmann and Varnum looked at trends in baby names over time (from Social Security Administration data), changes in word usage in books over time (using the Google Ngram database), and shifts in family structure, including family size and prevalence of multigenerational households (using U.S. Census data).
When housing prices were escalating rapidly, multigenerational households provided a buffer by first reducing the demand for housing and at the same time providing housing for seniors.
When housing prices were escalating rapidly, multigenerational households provided a buffer by first reducing the demand for housing and at the same time providing housing for seniors, who are among the fastest growing cohorts in Canada.
Although multigenerational households are culturally acceptable in black communities24 and are often beneficial to mothers and their children, 25 tensions are common as mothers and grandmothers struggle to define their roles in caregiving activities, such as feeding.24, 26 — 29 Grandmothers play important roles in infant feeding decisions, particularly related to the early introduction of complementary foods.21 Thus, interventions aimed at shifting cultural patterns of early complementary feeding have to go beyond the provision of information regarding the type and timing of complementary foods for infants, as proposed by the AAP, WIC, and WHO guidelines.
According to the last South African Census, just over 50 % of the country's households are multigenerational, reflecting a study reported in Time Magazine last November noting that more young adults (aged 18 to 34) in the United States are living with their parents now than at any time since 1940.
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