| Literature DB >> 28798609 |
Dieter Ferring1, Tom Michels1, Thomas Boll1, Sigrun-Heide Filipp2.
Abstract
Emotions towards a relationship partner provide relevant and specific information about relationship quality. Based on this assumption the present study was performed to identify different types of emotional relationship quality of middle-aged adult children with their ageing parents. This was done by cluster analytic procedures in a sample of 1,208 middle-aged adult children (482 men, 726 women). Using ratings of positive and negative emotions towards their mother and father as grouping variables, the same four-cluster solution emerged for both the child-mother relationship and the child-father relationship. Clusters were labelled as amicable, disharmonious, detached and ambivalent relationships. Results showed that especially amicable relationships clearly prevailed followed by ambivalent, detached and disharmonious relationships. Clusters differed significantly with respect to gender of adult child, willingness to support, expected parental support and overt conflicts. In a cross-classification of cluster membership regarding the child-mother relationship (four clusters) and the child-father relationship (four clusters), all possible 16 combinations were observed, with a considerable degree of divergence regarding the type of relationship quality within the same family. Results are discussed with respect to types of emotional relationship quality, within family differences and the intrafamilial regulation of relationship quality.Entities:
Keywords: Adult offspring; Emotions; Intergenerational relations; Parent–child relations; Taxonomies
Year: 2009 PMID: 28798609 PMCID: PMC5547348 DOI: 10.1007/s10433-009-0133-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Ageing ISSN: 1613-9372