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Who Provides the Care and Who Pays? The Stark Reality of Family Caregiving Burdens Based on Birth Order

NQ Score 82/100
N1 Content Completeness 9

Key facts

  • Who Provides the Care and Who Pays? The Stark Reality of Family Caregiving Burdens Based on Birth Order
  • Speee Inc., operator of the nursing care review site 'Caresul Kaigo', conducted a nationwide survey of 451 caregivers to understand the dynamics of elderly parent care among siblings. The findings reveal that the practical and financial burdens, as well as the types of conflicts experienced, differ drastically depending on whether a person is the eldest, middle, or youngest child. While eldest children often bear the brunt of solitary caregiving and expenses, middle children suffer the highest rate of sibling conflicts, feeling caught in the middle. Youngest children, meanwhile, grapple with forced roles and anxieties over future inheritance.
  • Source: PR TIMES
  • Date: Sat Jun 06 2026 00:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)

Direct answer

Speee Inc., operator of the nursing care review site 'Caresul Kaigo', conducted a nationwide survey of 451 caregivers to understand the dynamics of elderly parent care among siblings. The findings reveal that the practical and financial burdens, as well as the types of conflicts experienced, differ drastically depending on whether a person is the eldest, middle, or youngest child. While eldest children often bear the brunt of solitary caregiving and expenses, middle children suffer the highest rate of sibling conflicts, feeling caught in the middle. Youngest children, meanwhile, grapple with forced roles and anxieties over future inheritance.

Citation
Who Provides the Care and Who Pays? The Stark Reality of Family Caregiving Burdens Based on Birth Order (Sat Jun 06 2026 00:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
Source
PR TIMES
Date
Sat Jun 06 2026 00:30:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)

AI Summary (NQ-processed)

Speee Inc., operator of the nursing care review site 'Caresul Kaigo', conducted a nationwide survey of 451 caregivers to understand the dynamics of elderly parent care among siblings. The findings reveal that the practical and financial burdens, as well as the types of conflicts experienced, differ drastically depending on whether a person is the eldest, middle, or youngest child. While eldest children often bear the brunt of solitary caregiving and expenses, middle children suffer the highest rate of sibling conflicts, feeling caught in the middle. Youngest children, meanwhile, grapple with forced roles and anxieties over future inheritance.

AI Analysis

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How are elderly care costs typically shared among siblings?
A: While 55.2% use parent funds, when those run out, 78.2% of eldest children bear the full or majority cost out-of-pocket.
Q: What challenges do middle children face in caregiving?
A: Middle children have the highest rate of sibling conflicts (77%), often feeling squeezed by unfair expectations and blame from both older and younger siblings.
Q: Who conducted this caregiving survey?
A: Speee Inc., the operator of the nursing care facility review site 'Caresul Kaigo', conducted the survey.