跨代担忧:成年孙辈的问题对祖父母福祉的影响

Robert T Frase, J Jill Suitor, Megan Gilligan, Catherine Stepniak, Destiny Ogle, Karen L Fingerman
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摘要

目标 代际利害关系假说和生命历程理论认为,上一代人对下一代人的幸福进行投资。与此相一致的是,以往的研究表明,成年子女的问题与父母的福利恶化相关。由于多代联系在 21 世纪变得越来越重要,我们提出成年孙辈的问题也可能影响祖父母的幸福。在本文中,我们对这一假设进行了验证,并研究了祖父母的种族和母/父身份的调节作用。方法 分析样本包括 206 位 65-95 岁的祖父母,他们参加了第二波家庭交流研究。成年孙辈的问题以经历过(1)身体-情感问题和(2)生活方式-行为问题的成年孙辈的比例进行操作。结果 主效应多层次分析表明,成年孙辈的问题并不能预测祖父母的幸福感。然而,调节分析表明,祖父母的抑郁症状与成年孙辈的身体-情感问题之间的关联在黑人祖父母中大于白人祖父母,在母系祖父母中大于父系祖父母。成年孙辈的生活方式-行为问题并不能预测祖父母的抑郁情况,而且这些影响不受种族或母亲/父亲身份的制约。讨论 这些研究结果拓展了关于祖父母与成年孙辈关系重要性的研究,并通过考虑年轻一代成员经历的问题如何影响老年人的心理健康,为多代关系和健康研究做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Worrying Across the Generations: The Impact of Adult Grandchildren’s Problems on Grandparents’ Well-Being
Objectives The intergenerational stake hypothesis and theories of the life course posit that older generations are invested in the well-being of younger generations. Consistent with this, previous research has shown that adult children’s problems are associated with worse parental well-being. Because multigenerational ties have become increasingly important in the 21st century, we propose that adult grandchildren’s problems may also impact grandparents’ well-being. In this paper, we test this hypothesis and investigate the moderating effects of grandparents’ race and maternal/paternal status. Methods The analytic sample includes 206 grandparents aged 65-95 who participated in the second wave of the Family Exchanges Study. Adult grandchildren’s problems were operationalized as the proportions of adult grandchildren who experienced (1) physical-emotional problems and (2) lifestyle-behavioral problems. Results Main effects multilevel analyses suggested that adult grandchildren’s problems did not predict grandparents’ well-being. However, moderation analyses revealed that the association between grandparents’ depressive symptoms and adult grandchildren’s physical-emotional problems was larger among Black than White grandparents, and maternal than paternal grandparents. Adult grandchildren’s lifestyle-behavioral problems did not predict grandparents’ depression, and these effects were not conditioned by race or maternal/paternal status. Discussion These findings expand research on the importance of grandparent-adult grandchild relationships and contribute to research on multigenerational relationships and health by considering how problems experienced by members of younger generations impact the psychological well-being of older adults.
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