‘Boomerang’ moves and young adults’ mental well-being in the United Kingdom

IF 3.4 2区 社会学 Q1 Medicine
Jiawei Wu, Emily Grundy
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

In the UK and many other contemporary Western populations, attaining and maintaining residential independence is an important marker of a young person’s successful transition to adulthood. However, employment precarity, partnership breakdown, and difficulties in affording housing may mean that some young adults are unable to maintain residential independence and ‘boomerang’ back to co-reside with their parents. Although a growing body of literature has explored how such counter-transitions affect parents’ mental well-being, little is known about effects on the mental health of the young returnees and whether any such effects vary by gender or socio-economic characteristics.

Data and methods

We use data from 11 waves (2009–2020) of the UK Household Longitudinal Study (UKHLS) and focus on young adults aged 21–35 (N = 9714). We estimate fixed-effects models to analyse the effect of returning to the parental home on changes in young adults’ mental well-being measured using scores on the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) and the Mental Component Summary (MCS) score of the Short Form Health Survey (SF-12).

Results

Over the period of observation, 15% of young adults made one or more moves back to the parental home. The fixed-effects analysis showed that returning to the parental home was associated with a reduction (improvement) in GHQ score, although effects were small and did not vary by gender, employment status, partnership status, or presence of a co-resident biological child. No associations were found with changes in MCS score.

Conclusion

Although cross-sectional results from the UK have shown that the mental health of young adults living with parents is worse than that of young adults living independently, we found no evidence that returning to the parental home was associated with a deterioration in young adults’ mental health. On the contrary, returns home were associated with a slight reduction in depressive symptoms suggesting that the benefits of parental support may outweigh possible negative impacts of inability to maintain residential independence. Further research in other settings is needed to assess the extent to which these findings reflect the UK context.

“回旋镖”运动与英国年轻人的心理健康
背景在英国和许多其他当代西方人口中,获得并保持居住独立是年轻人成功过渡到成年的重要标志。然而,就业不稳定、伴侣关系破裂和难以负担住房可能意味着一些年轻人无法保持居住独立,无法“回旋镖”回到与父母同住的地方。尽管越来越多的文献探讨了这种反转变如何影响父母的心理健康,但对年轻回归者的心理健康影响以及这种影响是否因性别或社会经济特征而异知之甚少。数据和方法我们使用了英国家庭纵向研究(UKHLS)11波(2009-2010)的数据,重点关注21-35岁的年轻人(N=9714)。我们估计了固定效应模型,以分析返回父母家对年轻人心理健康变化的影响,这些变化是使用一般健康问卷(GHQ)的分数和短期健康调查(SF-12)的心理成分汇总(MCS)分数测量的。结果在观察期内,15%的年轻人搬回父母家一次或多次。固定效应分析表明,回到父母家与GHQ评分的降低(改善)有关,尽管影响很小,并且不因性别、就业状况、伴侣关系状况或共同居住的亲生子女的存在而变化。MCS评分的变化未发现相关性。结论尽管英国的横断面结果表明,与父母一起生活的年轻人的心理健康状况比独立生活的年轻人为差,但我们没有发现任何证据表明,回到父母家与年轻人的精神健康状况恶化有关。相反,回家与抑郁症状的轻微减轻有关,这表明父母支持的好处可能超过无法保持居住独立可能带来的负面影响。需要在其他环境中进行进一步研究,以评估这些发现在多大程度上反映了英国的情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Advances in Life Course Research
Advances in Life Course Research SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.90%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: Advances in Life Course Research publishes articles dealing with various aspects of the human life course. Seeing life course research as an essentially interdisciplinary field of study, it invites and welcomes contributions from anthropology, biosocial science, demography, epidemiology and statistics, gerontology, economics, management and organisation science, policy studies, psychology, research methodology and sociology. Original empirical analyses, theoretical contributions, methodological studies and reviews accessible to a broad set of readers are welcome.
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