The nature of formal and informal support is functionally differentiated in this article. While they are interrelated and actually interface at many junctures, each type of support functions most effectively in specific areas. Formal support operates within the context of bureaucratic structure, reflecting both its strengths and limitations. Formal organizations, however, could never hope to meet all of the instrumental, social and emotional needs of the individual. It is clearly supplemental to informal support. The mechanisms by which formal agencies supplement informal support deserve much greater attention in applied gerontological research. The interface between the two levels of support is where the most exciting applied research is likely to take place.
This paper explores the nature of informal support given to older women, depending upon their marital status and the presence of living children. To control for differential availability of formal resources and for background characteristics, random samples of 371 noninstitutionalized female residents of two midwestern life care communities were interviewed. We found, unsurprisingly, that women who were presently, or who had been married, received more emotional, social, and instrumental support from their family members. But in further analysis it became clear, much to our surprise, that the presence of a husband only assured the married women of significantly more instrumental (task-oriented) support. It was the existence of living children--even just one child--that generated greater emotional, social, and instrumental support from her family. The greatest informal support deficits are among the never married, as expected, but are a result of the lack of children rather than the absence of a husband.
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