| Literature DB >> 31122076 |
Abstract
Although many studies have examined contemporary increases in parent-adult child coresidence, questions about what this demographic shift means for the well-being of parents remain. This article draws on insights from the life course perspective to investigate the relationship between parent-adult child coresidence and parental mental health among U.S. adults ages 50+, distinguishing between parents stably living with and without adult children and those who transitioned into or out of coresidence with an adult child. Based on analyses of the 2008 to 2012 waves of the Health and Retirement Study (N = 11,277), parents with a newly coresidential adult child experienced an increase in depressive symptoms relative to their peers without coresidential adult children. Further analyses suggest that transitions to coresidence that occurred in the southern United States or involved out-of-work children were particularly depressing for parents. These findings highlight the significance of evolving intergenerational living arrangements for the well-being of older adults.Entities:
Keywords: intergenerational households; life course; living arrangements; mental health; older adults; parent–adult child coresidence
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31122076 PMCID: PMC6573002 DOI: 10.1177/0022146519849113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Soc Behav ISSN: 0022-1465
Means (and Standard Deviations) of Study Variables by Adult Child Coresidential Transitions, 2008 to 2010.
| Variable | Total | Stably without coresidential adult children | Stably coresidential adult child | Exit of coresidential adult child | New coresidential adult child |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depressive symptoms 2012 (0–8) | 1.39 | 1.31 | 1.58 | 1.47 | 1.85 |
| Depressive symptoms 2008 (0–8) | 1.34 | 1.25 | 1.54 | 1.64 | 1.68 |
| Functional limitations 2008 (0–5) | .20 | .19 | .28 | .22 | .32 |
| Female (%) | 60.67 | 58.95 | 66.19 | 63.61 | 69.62 |
| Age 2010 (50–101) | 69.87 | 70.72 | 67.69 | 64.75 | 68.49 |
| U.S. census region (%) | |||||
| Northeast | 14.37 | 14.07 | 16.48 | 14.51 | 11.35 |
| Midwest | 25.92 | 27.11 | 21.53 | 25.80 | 19.62 |
| South | 40.49 | 40.11 | 40.45 | 42.21 | 42.12 |
| West | 19.21 | 18.71 | 21.53 | 17.48 | 26.92 |
| Race-ethnicity (%) | |||||
| White | 74.30 | 79.72 | 54.66 | 60.88 | 55.00 |
| African American | 13.99 | 11.82 | 20.85 | 20.33 | 23.46 |
| Hispanic | 9.45 | 6.45 | 21.03 | 16.88 | 18.27 |
| Other | 2.26 | 2.01 | 3.47 | 1.90 | 3.27 |
| Years of education (0–17) | 12.66 | 12.88 | 11.79 | 12.34 | 11.73 |
| Household income 2010 (%) | |||||
| 1st quartile | 25.00 | 22.41 | 34.43 | 28.06 | 37.69 |
| 2nd quartile | 25.00 | 25.69 | 22.39 | 22.12 | 26.15 |
| 3rd quartile | 25.00 | 26.35 | 20.74 | 21.88 | 17.50 |
| 4th quartile | 25.00 | 25.54 | 22.44 | 27.94 | 18.65 |
| Employed 2010 (%) | 32.34 | 30.01 | 38.87 | 46.86 | 33.46 |
| Marital status 2010 (%) | |||||
| Married/partnered | 66.30 | 68.90 | 58.75 | 64.80 | 47.69 |
| Separated/divorced | 11.70 | 10.71 | 13.47 | 15.22 | 17.31 |
| Widowed | 20.72 | 19.18 | 26.12 | 18.74 | 32.70 |
| Never married | 1.28 | 1.19 | 1.65 | 1.19 | 2.12 |
| Number of adult children (1–20) | 3.53 | 3.40 | 3.90 | 4.08 | 4.40 |
Significantly different from those stably without coresidential adult children at p < .05, two-tailed t tests.
Means (and Standard Deviations) of Study Variables by Type of Move among Parents with a New Coresidential Adult Child in 2010 (N = 520).
| Variable | Child moved | Parent moved | Other type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depressive symptoms 2012 (0–8) | 1.79 | 2.16 | 1.85 |
| Depressive symptoms 2008 (0–8) | 1.58 | 2.13 | 1.77 |
| Functional limitations 2008 (0–5) | .29 | .45 | .37 |
| Female (%) | 68.62 | 75.90 | 65.38 |
| Age 2010 (50–96) | 67.19 | 74.30 | 69.04 |
| U.S. census region (%) | |||
| Northeast | 11.22 | 15.66 | 3.85 |
| Midwest | 21.43 | 13.25 | 13.46 |
| South | 42.09 | 44.58 | 36.54 |
| West | 25.26 | 26.51 | 46.15 |
| Race-ethnicity (%) | |||
| White | 56.38 | 49.40 | 51.92 |
| African American | 23.98 | 16.87 | 26.92 |
| Hispanic | 16.84 | 28.92 | 17.31 |
| Other | 2.81 | 4.82 | 3.85 |
| Years of education (0–17) | 11.84 | 10.64 | 12.62 |
| Household income 2010 (%) | |||
| 1st quartile | 31.63 | 69.88 | 30.77 |
| 2nd quartile | 27.55 | 20.48 | 30.77 |
| 3rd quartile | 19.13 | 4.82 | 23.08 |
| 4th quartile | 21.68 | 4.82 | 15.38 |
| Employed 2010 (%) | 39.54 | 9.64 | 23.08 |
| Marital status 2010 (%) | |||
| Married/partnered | 54.59 | 13.25 | 50.00 |
| Separated/divorced | 15.31 | 24.10 | 21.15 |
| Widowed | 28.32 | 59.04 | 26.92 |
| Never married | 1.79 | 3.61 | 1.92 |
| Number of adult children 2010 (1–14) | 4.33 | 4.48 | 4.60 |
| Characteristics of new coresidential child(ren) (%) | |||
| Age 35+ | 59.95 | 81.93 | 80.77 |
| Not employed | 42.86 | 31.33 | 34.62 |
| Not partnered | 80.61 | 37.35 | 21.15 |
| Nonparent | 40.05 | 19.28 | 28.85 |
| Beneficiary of coresidential move (%) | |||
| Child | 60.46 | 2.41 | 50.00 |
| Parent | 3.57 | 45.78 | 13.46 |
| Both | 36.48 | 49.40 | 32.69 |
| Other | 1.79 | 2.41 | 5.77 |
Significantly different from parents with children who moved to their home at p < .05, two-tailed t tests.
Coefficients from Ordinary Least Squares Regression of Depressive Symptoms in 2012 on Adult Child Coresidential Transitions, 2008 to 2010 (N = 11,277).
| Variable (reference) | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depressive symptoms 2008 | .540 | .468 | .468 |
| Adult child coresidential transitions (no coresidential adult children) | |||
| Stably coresidential adult child | .103 | .026 | −.191 |
| Exit of coresidential adult child | −.108 | −.090 | −.071 |
| New coresidential adult child | .285 | .179 | −.299 |
| Functional limitations 2008 | .282 | .281 | |
| Female | .065 | .065 | |
| Age 2010 | −.005 | −.005 | |
| U.S. census region (Northeast) | |||
| Midwest | −.078 | −.137 | |
| South | .045 | −.001 | |
| West | .063 | .014 | |
| Race-ethnicity (white) | |||
| African American | −.014 | −.014 | |
| Hispanic | −.017 | −.020 | |
| Other | .110 | .098 | |
| Years of education | −.038 | −.038 | |
| Household income quartile 2010 | −.099 | −.099 | |
| Employed 2010 | −.207 | −.207 | |
| Marital status 2010 (married) | |||
| Separated/divorced | .186 | .189 | |
| Widowed | .067 | .070 | |
| Never married | −.206 | −.202 | |
| Number of adult children | −.009 | −.009 | |
| Stably coresidential child × Midwest | .235 | ||
| Stably coresidential child × South | .231 | ||
| Stably coresidential child × West | .345 | ||
| Exit of coresidential child × Midwest | −.101 | ||
| Exit of coresidential child × South | −.151 | ||
| Exit of coresidential child × West | −.415 | ||
| New coresidential child × Midwest | .708** | ||
| New coresidential child × South | .481 | ||
| New coresidential child × West | .496 | ||
|
| .286 | .314 | .315 |
Note: Standard errors in parentheses.
p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.
Coefficients from Inverse-Probability Weighted Ordinary Least Squares Regression of Depressive Symptoms in 2012 on Adult Child Coresidential Transitions, 2008 to 2010 (N = 11,277).
| Variable (reference) | Model 1 | Model 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Depressive symptoms 2008 | .474 | .474 |
| Adult child coresidential transitions (no coresidential adult children) | ||
| Stably coresidential adult child | .010 | .014 |
| Exit of coresidential adult child | −.067 | −.074 |
| New coresidential adult child | .183 | −.255 |
| U.S. census region (Northeast) | ||
| Midwest | .128 | −.116 |
| South | .266 | −.022 |
| West | .262 | .067 |
| Stably coresidential child × Midwest | .228 | |
| Stably coresidential child × South | .481 | |
| Stably coresidential child × West | .136 | |
| Exit of coresidential child × Midwest | −.407 | |
| Exit of coresidential child × South | −.417 | |
| Exit of coresidential child × West | −.784 | |
| New coresidential child × Midwest | .500 | |
| New coresidential child × South | .517 | |
| New coresidential child × West | .486 |
Note: Standard errors in parentheses. All models also control for depressive symptoms and functional limitations in 2008, gender, age in 2010, race-ethnicity, education, income, work status, marital status, and number of adult children in 2010.
p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.
Coefficients from Ordinary Least Squares Regressions of Depressive Symptoms in 2012 on Coresidential Adult Child and Coresidential Move Characteristics among Parents with Newly Coresidential Children from 2008 to 2010 (N = 520).
| Variable (reference) | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | Model 5 | Model 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age 35+ (ages 18–34) | .042 | |||||
| Not employed (employed) | .522 | |||||
| Not partnered (partnered) | −.178 | |||||
| Nonparent (parent) | −.270 | |||||
| Type of coresidential move (child moved) | ||||||
| Parent moved | −.180 | |||||
| Both moved/other type of move | −.117 | |||||
| Main beneficiary of coresidential move (child) | ||||||
| Parent | .100(.314) | |||||
| Both | −.049 | |||||
| Other | .478 |
Note: All models control for depressive symptoms and functional limitations in 2008, gender, age in 2010, region, race-ethnicity, education, income, work status, marital status, and number of adult children in 2010.
p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001.