Intergenerational support and depressive symptoms in old age: The difference between urban and rural China

Dec 5, 2022Frontiers in public health

How family support relates to depression in older adults in urban and rural China

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Abstract

A sample of 3,498 participants showed that support from adult children is associated with fewer depressive symptoms in older adults.

  • Urban older participants receiving emotional support from adult children reported fewer depressive symptoms.
  • Rural older participants receiving financial support from adult children experienced fewer depressive symptoms.
  • Both urban and rural participants receiving instrumental support showed fewer depressive symptoms.
  • The study highlights different impacts of intergenerational support on depressive symptoms based on urban or rural living conditions.

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Key numbers

3,498
Participants
Total number of older adults surveyed from urban and rural areas.
12.30
Higher depressive symptoms in rural areas
Average depressive symptoms score in rural participants.
9.67
Lower depressive symptoms in urban areas
Average depressive symptoms score in urban participants.

Full Text

What this is

  • The study examines how intergenerational support affects depressive symptoms in older adults in urban vs. rural China.
  • It analyzes data from 3,498 participants to explore differences in support mechanisms and their mental health impacts.
  • Findings reveal that financial support from adult children reduces depressive symptoms in rural areas, while emotional support is more beneficial in urban settings.

Essence

  • Intergenerational support impacts depressive symptoms differently in urban and rural older adults in China. Financial support reduces symptoms in rural areas, while emotional support is key in urban settings.

Key takeaways

  • Rural older adults receiving financial support from children report fewer depressive symptoms. This aligns with traditional expectations of financial care in rural families.
  • Urban older adults benefit more from emotional support, indicating a shift from economic to emotional ties in modern family structures.
  • Instrumental support consistently correlates with fewer depressive symptoms in both urban and rural areas, highlighting its importance across contexts.

Caveats

  • The study's findings may not generalize beyond the specific regions studied, limiting broader applicability.
  • The reliance on self-reported data could introduce biases, affecting the accuracy of depressive symptom assessments.

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