Li Mengting, Le Qun, Guo Man, Peng Changmin, Tang Fengyan, Da Wendi, Jiang Yanping
Department of Social Security, School of Labor and Human Resources, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China.
Department of Public Health, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, Massachusetts, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2025 Jun 10;80(7). doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbaf079.
Existing family and caregiving studies have primarily focused on the mental health of either older adults or adult children. Less is known about the effect of intergenerational relations on the mental health of both generations. This study examined the association between intergenerational solidarity and mental health among older Chinese Americans and their adult children using a dyadic analysis, considering the gendered nature of these relationships.
This study included 214 father-child and 339 mother-child dyads. Intergenerational solidarity (emotional closeness, contact frequency, upward emotional support, upward financial support) and mental health (anxiety, depression, loneliness) were assessed in both generations. Actor-Partner Interdependence Models were used.
Greater emotional closeness with their adult children reported by mothers was associated with better mental health in mothers, whereas children's reported emotional closeness with fathers, but not with mothers, was associated with better mental health in children. Daily contact reported by fathers and adult children showed a positive association with their respective mental health. Higher upward emotional support reported by fathers, mothers, and children was associated with mental health in each respective group. Higher upward financial support reported by fathers and mothers was linked to better mental health in each respective group.
These findings enrich the intergenerational solidarity model by showing how intergenerational solidarity shapes well-being across generations in immigration contexts, varying by solidarity dimension and parental gender. The results suggest that targeted mental health interventions, such as fostering emotional support within immigrant families, may promote well-being for both generations.
现有的家庭与照护研究主要聚焦于老年人或成年子女的心理健康。对于代际关系对两代人心理健康的影响,我们了解得较少。本研究采用二元分析方法,考虑到这些关系的性别特征,考察了华裔美国老年人及其成年子女之间的代际团结与心理健康之间的关联。
本研究纳入了214对父子二元组和339对母子二元组。对两代人的代际团结(情感亲密程度、联系频率、向上的情感支持、向上的经济支持)和心理健康(焦虑、抑郁、孤独感)进行了评估。使用了行为者-伙伴相互依赖模型。
母亲报告的与成年子女更高的情感亲密程度与母亲更好的心理健康状况相关,而子女报告的与父亲而非母亲的情感亲密程度与子女更好的心理健康状况相关。父亲和成年子女报告的日常联系与他们各自的心理健康呈正相关。父亲、母亲和子女报告的更高的向上情感支持与各自群体的心理健康相关。父亲和母亲报告的更高的向上经济支持与各自群体更好的心理健康相关。
这些发现丰富了代际团结模型,展示了在移民背景下代际团结如何通过团结维度和父母性别差异塑造两代人的幸福感。结果表明,有针对性的心理健康干预措施,如在移民家庭中促进情感支持,可能会促进两代人的幸福感。