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Statistics

A Profile of Older Americans: 2002

Living Arrangements

Over half (55%) the older noninstitutionalized persons lived with their spouse in 2000. Approximately 10.1 million or 73% of older men, and 7.7 million or 41% of older women, lived with their spouse (Figure 3). The proportion living with their spouse decreased with age, especially for women. Only 28.8% of women 75+ years old lived with a spouse.

About 30% (9.7 million) of all noninstitutionalized older persons in 2000 lived alone (7.4 million women, 2.4 million men). They represented 40% of older women and 17% of older men. The proportion living alone increases with advanced age. Among women aged 75 and over, for example, half (49.4%) lived alone.

About 633,000 grandparents aged 65 or over maintained households in which grandchildren were present in 1997.  In addition, 510,000 grandparents over 65 years lived in parent- maintained households in which their grandchildren were present.

While a relatively small number (1.56 million) and percentage (4.5%) of the 65+ population lived in nursing homes in 2000, the percentage increases dramatically with age, ranging from 1.1% for persons 65-74 years to 4.7% for persons 75-84 years and 18.2% for persons 85+.

Figure 3:  Living Arrangements of Persons 65+: 2000


(Based on data from U.S. Bureau of the Census.  See: "America’s Families and Living Arrangements; Population Characteristics: June, 2001, Current Population Reports, P20-537” and  “The 65 Years and Over Population: 2000, Census 2000 Brief, October, 2001.”)

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