| Literature DB >> 34831813 |
Dan Chen1, Yuying Tong1.
Abstract
Child loss is a rare but traumatic life event that often has a detrimental effect on parental wellbeing. However, parents' resources and strategies in coping with the stressful child bereavement event may depend on timing of the event. This study intends to examine how parental depression could be aroused by the occurrence and timing of child bereavement, and how the influences vary by child gender. Drawing on the theoretical framework of the stress and life course, and using three waves of data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we find that both the occurrence and timing of child bereavement are significantly associated with parental depression in later life. Bereaved parents are more likely to report depression than non-bereaved parents. Child bereavement in children's young adulthood is more likely to spark off parental depression than that occurring in children's midlife or later. Further analysis confirms that the timing effect of child bereavement differs by child gender. Parents whose son died during young adulthood are more likely to report depression than their counterparts whose daughter died. Future studies need to address how to build up a specific social welfare program targeting child bereavement groups in different life stages.Entities:
Keywords: ageing and the life course perspective; child loss; intergenerational solidarity; psychological wellbeing; social timing; son preference
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34831813 PMCID: PMC8622019 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182212058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Statistics of analytic sample in wave 1.
| Variables | Mean (SD) | Range | N |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exposure to child loss (%) | 1.67 | - | 14,354 |
| Age | 59.16 (9.59) | 45–101 | 14,354 |
| Male (%) | 47.7 | - | 14,354 |
| Education (%) | 14,354 | ||
| Illiterate | 26.3 | - | 14,354 |
| Primary school | 39.5 | - | 14,354 |
| Middle school or higher | 34.2 | - | 14,354 |
| Urban | 22.4 | - | 14,354 |
| Married (%) | 88.5 | - | 14,354 |
| Logged expenditure per capital | 8.67 (0.86) | 0–11.61 | 14,354 |
| Total number of living children | 2.65 (1.33) | 1–10 | 14,354 |
| Self-rated health | 2.03 (0.87) | 1–4 | 14,354 |
| Total number of chronic diseases | 1.38 (1.39) | 0–9 | 14,354 |
| IADL (%) | 12.1 | - | 14,354 |
| Self-rated health in childhood | 3.73 (1.07) | 1–5 | 14,354 |
| Information of the first deceased child | |||
| Child’s age when the child died | 23.36 (17.93) | 0–65 | 234 |
| Time since the child’s death | 23.89 (17.44) | 0–68 | 234 |
| Child’s life stage when the child died (%) | |||
| Before adulthood | 37.6 | - | 234 |
| Young adulthood | 40.6 | - | |
| Middle and late adulthood | 21.8 | - | |
| Son (%) | 63.3 | - | 234 |
Notes: Data source is CHARLS in 2011; SD: Standard deviation.
Random-effects logistic regression models predicting parental depression by child loss.
| Variables | Model 1 | Model 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O.R. | 95% CI | S.E. | O.R. | S.E. | 95% CI | |
| Death of a child (ref., No) | 1.628 * | [1.106, 2.397] | 0.321 | 1.677 ** | 0.298 | [1.184, 2.374] |
| Age | 1.126 *** | [1.069, 1.186] | 0.03 | 1.048 + | 0.025 | [0.999, 1.099] |
| Age-square | 0.999 *** | [0.998, 0.999] | 0.00 | 0.999 ** | 0.00 | [0.999, 0.999] |
| Male (ref., Female) | 0.472 *** | [0.429, 0.519] | 0.023 | 0.571 *** | 0.025 | [0.524, 0.621] |
| Married (ref., unmarried) | 0.534 *** | [0.466, 0.610] | 0.036 | 0.540 *** | 0.034 | [0.478, 0.611] |
| Urban (ref., Rural) | 0.502 *** | [0.444, 0.567] | 0.031 | 0.530 *** | 0.03 | [0.474, 0.592] |
| Education (ref., Illiterate) | ||||||
| Primary school | 0.887 * | [0.793, 0.993] | 0.051 | 0.903 * | 0.047 | [0.816, 0.999] |
| Middle school or higher | 0.464 *** | [0.405, 0.530] | 0.032 | 0.567 *** | 0.035 | [0.503, 0.640] |
| Logged household expenditure | 1.028 | [0.994, 1.064] | 0.018 | 1.002 | 0.017 | [0.969, 1.035] |
| Sum of living children | 1.106 *** | [1.068, 1.146] | 0.02 | 1.058 *** | 0.018 | [1.024, 1.093] |
| Self-rated health in childhood | 0.891 *** | 0.016 | [0.859, 0.923] | |||
| Self-rated health | 0.464 *** | 0.011 | [0.443, 0.485] | |||
| IADL (ref. Abled) | 2.484 *** | 0.125 | [2.252, 2.741] | |||
| Sum of chronic diseases | 1.282 *** | 0.017 | [1.248, 1.316] | |||
| BIC | 40,291.693 | 37,558.56 | ||||
| Log-likelihood | −20,083.1 | −18,695.5 | ||||
| N | 35,013 | 35,013 |
Notes: p < 0.1 +; p < 0.05 *, p < 0.01 **, p < 0.001 ***; two tailed tests.
Random-effects logistic regression models predicting parental depression by life course of deceased child.
| Variables | Model 3 | Model 4 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O.R. | 95% CI | S.E. | O.R. | 95% CI | S.E. | |
| Child life course (ref., Midlife and later) | ||||||
| Before adulthood | 3.36 | [0.598, 18.87] | 2.958 | 3.001 | [0.388, 23.309] | 3.132 |
| Young adulthood | 3.488 * | [1.174, 10.358] | 1.937 | 0.659 | [0.122, 3.565] | 0.568 |
| Son (ref., Daughter) | 0.534 | [0.249, 1.141] | 0.207 | 0.277 | [0.056, 1.367] | 0.226 |
| Interaction items | ||||||
| Child life course # Child’s gender | ||||||
| Before adulthood * Son | 0.608 | [0.089, 4.175] | 0.598 | |||
| Young adulthood * Son | 10.295 * | [1.409, 75.226] | 10.447 | |||
| BIC | 596.507 | 595.635 | ||||
| Log-likelihood | −240.3 | −233.7 | ||||
| N | 447 | 447 | ||||
Notes: p < 0.1 +; p < 0.05 *, p < 0.01 **, p < 0.001 ***; two tailed tests. Covariates including age, age-squared, gender, marital status, education, logged family expenditure, number of living children, self-rated health in childhood, self-rated health, IADL, chronic diseases are controlled.