Lin I-Fen, Wiemers Emily E, Chin Janecca A, Strauss Anna Wiersma, Seltzer Judith A, Hotz V Joseph
Department of Sociology and Center for Family and Demographic Research, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403.
Department of Public Administration and International Affairs, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244.
J Marriage Fam. 2025 Apr;87(2):460-477. doi: 10.1111/jomf.13043. Epub 2024 Nov 9.
Guided by the life-course principles of linked lives embedded in historical time and place, we investigated whether nonresident adult children provided financial and time assistance to parents in response to their needs during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Adult children are an important source of support for older adults during crises, yet their ability to help parents may have been constrained during the pandemic.
Data came from the 2016, 2018 and 2020 waves of the Health and Retirement Study. We employed three analytic strategies. First, we examined how nonresident adult children responded to parental needs during the pandemic. Second, we compared the financial and time assistance received during the pandemic with earlier periods. Third, we assessed whether support patterns varied depending on the severity of the pandemic in places where parents lived. All analyses used linear probability models, adjusting for pre-pandemic characteristics.
Parents facing economic hardship more often received money help and those experiencing difficulty buying food for non-financial reasons more often received time help from adult children compared to those without such challenges. Moreover, both financial and time assistance from adult children increased during the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic levels. Hardships increased the probability of receiving money and time help from adult children when parents lived in areas with a high level of pandemic severity.
Adult children became more responsive to parental needs during the COVID-19 pandemic, underscoring the importance of linked lives across generations during times of crisis.
以嵌入历史时间和地点的关联生活的生命历程原则为指导,我们调查了在新冠疫情期间,不住在一起的成年子女是否会根据父母的需求提供经济和时间上的帮助。
成年子女是老年人在危机期间重要的支持来源,但在疫情期间他们帮助父母的能力可能受到了限制。
数据来自2016年、2018年和2020年的健康与退休研究。我们采用了三种分析策略。首先,我们研究了不住在一起的成年子女在疫情期间如何应对父母的需求。其次,我们将疫情期间获得的经济和时间帮助与早期进行了比较。第三,我们评估了支持模式是否因父母居住地区疫情的严重程度而异。所有分析都使用了线性概率模型,并对疫情前的特征进行了调整。
与没有这些困难的父母相比,面临经济困难的父母更常得到金钱帮助,因非经济原因难以购买食物的父母更常得到成年子女的时间帮助。此外,与疫情前相比,成年子女在疫情期间提供的经济和时间帮助都有所增加。当父母生活在疫情严重程度较高的地区时,困难增加了从成年子女那里获得金钱和时间帮助的可能性。
在新冠疫情期间,成年子女对父母需求的反应更加积极,凸显了危机时期代际关联生活的重要性。