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The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: Are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents

The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: Are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents
The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: Are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents

Research to-date has examined the impact of intergenerational support in terms of isolated types of support, or at one point in time, failing to provide strong evidence of the complex effect of support on older persons' wellbeing. Using the Harmonised China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (2011, 2013 and 2015), this paper investigates the impact of older people's living arrangements and intergenerational support provision/receipt on their physical and psychological wellbeing, focusing on rural-urban differences. The results show that receiving economic support from one's adult children was a stronger predictor for higher life satisfaction among rural residents compared to urban residents, while grandchild care provision was an important determinant for poor life satisfaction only for urban residents. Having weekly in-person and distant contact with one's adult children reduced the risk of depression in both rural and urban residents. Older women were more likely than men to receive support and to have contact with adult children, but also to report poor functional status and depression. The paper shows that it is important to improve the level of public economic transfers and public social care towards vulnerable older people in rural areas, and more emphasis should be placed on improving the psychological wellbeing of urban older residents, such as with the early diagnosis of depression.

CHARLS, Hukou, intergenerational support, living arrangements, physical health, psychological health, rural, urban
0144-686X
Yang, Yazhen
3d31fa56-7ce5-4f7a-844a-622bad392669
Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Vlachantoni, Athina
06a52fbb-f2a0-4c81-9fbc-d6efc736c6cb
Yang, Yazhen
3d31fa56-7ce5-4f7a-844a-622bad392669
Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Vlachantoni, Athina
06a52fbb-f2a0-4c81-9fbc-d6efc736c6cb

Yang, Yazhen, Evandrou, Maria and Vlachantoni, Athina (2021) The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: Are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents. Ageing & Society. (doi:10.1017/S0144686X21000702).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Research to-date has examined the impact of intergenerational support in terms of isolated types of support, or at one point in time, failing to provide strong evidence of the complex effect of support on older persons' wellbeing. Using the Harmonised China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (2011, 2013 and 2015), this paper investigates the impact of older people's living arrangements and intergenerational support provision/receipt on their physical and psychological wellbeing, focusing on rural-urban differences. The results show that receiving economic support from one's adult children was a stronger predictor for higher life satisfaction among rural residents compared to urban residents, while grandchild care provision was an important determinant for poor life satisfaction only for urban residents. Having weekly in-person and distant contact with one's adult children reduced the risk of depression in both rural and urban residents. Older women were more likely than men to receive support and to have contact with adult children, but also to report poor functional status and depression. The paper shows that it is important to improve the level of public economic transfers and public social care towards vulnerable older people in rural areas, and more emphasis should be placed on improving the psychological wellbeing of urban older residents, such as with the early diagnosis of depression.

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The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: Are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents? - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 27 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 June 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Keywords: CHARLS, Hukou, intergenerational support, living arrangements, physical health, psychological health, rural, urban

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 448969
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448969
ISSN: 0144-686X
PURE UUID: 10fe1e05-b46e-47d1-92c6-43a68f059a0b
ORCID for Maria Evandrou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2115-9358
ORCID for Athina Vlachantoni: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1539-3057

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Date deposited: 12 May 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:12

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