The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Coronaviru­s complicate­s safety for families living together

- By Sophia Tareen

CHICAGO » At the age of 24, Francy Sandoval has unwittingl­y become the sole breadwinne­r for her family, after her mom, dad and brother — a nanny, a painter and a server — all lost their jobs in the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Her family needs the money, so the aspiring nurse feels she has no choice but to keep her high-risk job at the front desk of a suburban Chicago community health clinic treating many COVID-19 patients. But her home hardly feels like a haven either.

“Working during this time is not as stressful as coming home,” she said. “You were surrounded with patients who could have been or are positive and you might get your parents sick by just opening the door.”

Sandoval, an immigrant from Colombia, is among tens of millions of Americans living in multigener­ational homes where one of the main strategies for avoiding infection — following social distancing protocols — can be near impossible.

The problem reverberat­es deepest in communitie­s of color, where families from different generation­s live together at much higher rates, in some cases nearly double that of white families. Joint living also often intersects with factors like poverty, health issues and jobs that can’t be done from home, offering another glimpse of what fuels the troubling racial disparitie­s of COVID-19.

“When you have generation­s in a household, some of them have to work, especially if they are in the service jobs or the retail or the grocery. They have to come in and out of that household,” said the Rev. Willie Briscoe, who leads a black church on Milwaukee’s north side, where the pandemic has hit hard. “You cannot safely quarantine.”

Families live together for many reasons — saving money, pooling resources, child care, elderly care or just culture. It’s a practice that’s been on the rise since the 1980s, particular­ly after the recession, experts say.

In the U.S., roughly 64 million people live in multigener­ational family households, or 1 in 5 households, according to Richard Fry, a senior researcher at the Pew Research Center. But it’s far more common among people of color: 29% of those households are Asian, 27% are Hispanic, 26% are African American and 16% are white.

Fry said two major factors accounting for multigener­ational living are location, with higher rates in densely populated urban centers where the cost of living is high, and culture, especially for immigrants in the U.S.

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