Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China

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Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China. / Chen, Jia; Chen, Mengni.

In: Research on Aging, 19.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Chen, J & Chen, M 2024, 'Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China', Research on Aging. https://doi.org/10.1177/01640275241229683

APA

Chen, J., & Chen, M. (2024). Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China. Research on Aging. https://doi.org/10.1177/01640275241229683

Vancouver

Chen J, Chen M. Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China. Research on Aging. 2024 Jan 19. https://doi.org/10.1177/01640275241229683

Author

Chen, Jia ; Chen, Mengni. / Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China. In: Research on Aging. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{b50ff2ace3fc4689ad9d899d213e0529,
title = "Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China",
abstract = "Intergenerational emotional closeness (IEC) in multi-child families manifests not only in the overall parent-child relationship but also by the extent of its within-family differentiation. This study aimed to identify distinct trajectories of collective IEC in multi-child families and to examine its potential associated factors. The study used four waves of the China Family Panel Studies (2010–2018). Based on a sample of 3474 older adults (age >60), growth mixture modelling and logistic regression were conducted. Two latent trajectory patterns of IEC were identified: increasingly tight-knit (93%) and persistently collectively ambivalent (7%). Compared to the latter trajectory, older adults who had a married/cohabiting partner, had better health and received support from all children, were more likely to have increasingly tight-knit trajectories of IEC. The study tells a story more about emotional cohesion between Chinese older adults and multiple offspring over time. Aging families experiencing persistently collectively ambivalent IEC deserve more attention.",
keywords = "collective ambivalence, emotional closeness, intergenerational relationship, multi-child family, within-family difference",
author = "Jia Chen and Mengni Chen",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1177/01640275241229683",
language = "English",
journal = "Research on Aging",
issn = "0164-0275",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trajectories of Intergenerational Emotional Closeness in Multi-Child Aging Families in China

AU - Chen, Jia

AU - Chen, Mengni

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

PY - 2024/1/19

Y1 - 2024/1/19

N2 - Intergenerational emotional closeness (IEC) in multi-child families manifests not only in the overall parent-child relationship but also by the extent of its within-family differentiation. This study aimed to identify distinct trajectories of collective IEC in multi-child families and to examine its potential associated factors. The study used four waves of the China Family Panel Studies (2010–2018). Based on a sample of 3474 older adults (age >60), growth mixture modelling and logistic regression were conducted. Two latent trajectory patterns of IEC were identified: increasingly tight-knit (93%) and persistently collectively ambivalent (7%). Compared to the latter trajectory, older adults who had a married/cohabiting partner, had better health and received support from all children, were more likely to have increasingly tight-knit trajectories of IEC. The study tells a story more about emotional cohesion between Chinese older adults and multiple offspring over time. Aging families experiencing persistently collectively ambivalent IEC deserve more attention.

AB - Intergenerational emotional closeness (IEC) in multi-child families manifests not only in the overall parent-child relationship but also by the extent of its within-family differentiation. This study aimed to identify distinct trajectories of collective IEC in multi-child families and to examine its potential associated factors. The study used four waves of the China Family Panel Studies (2010–2018). Based on a sample of 3474 older adults (age >60), growth mixture modelling and logistic regression were conducted. Two latent trajectory patterns of IEC were identified: increasingly tight-knit (93%) and persistently collectively ambivalent (7%). Compared to the latter trajectory, older adults who had a married/cohabiting partner, had better health and received support from all children, were more likely to have increasingly tight-knit trajectories of IEC. The study tells a story more about emotional cohesion between Chinese older adults and multiple offspring over time. Aging families experiencing persistently collectively ambivalent IEC deserve more attention.

KW - collective ambivalence

KW - emotional closeness

KW - intergenerational relationship

KW - multi-child family

KW - within-family difference

U2 - 10.1177/01640275241229683

DO - 10.1177/01640275241229683

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38243368

AN - SCOPUS:85182681256

JO - Research on Aging

JF - Research on Aging

SN - 0164-0275

ER -

ID: 387073327