Journal of cross-cultural gerontology | 2021

Filial Piety and Parental Depressive Symptoms: All Children Matter - Evidence from Rural Northern China.

 
 

Abstract


Little research has considered all children while investigating adult children s role in their older parents health and well-being. In this study, we examine the effect of filial piety across all children on parental depressive symptoms. A sample of 432 older parents with 1,223 adult children in a rural county in northern China rated the filial piety level for each child individually. Ratings were then combined across multiple children and organized into an ordinal variable of filial piety including three levels: all children being filial, some of the children being filial, and none of the children being filial. Ordinary least squares linear regression analyses were performed. The results reveal a significant and negative relationship between adult children s filial piety levels and older parents depressive symptoms after controlling for age, gender, marital status, financial strain, chronic conditions, and social support from family and friends, respectively. That is, one level lower in the adult children s filial piety corresponds to increase in level of older parents depressive symptoms. Filial piety seems to benefit older Chinese parents mental health net of social support from family and friends in this sample. Including information from all children in the analyses is informative for better understanding the psychological significance of filial piety for healthy aging in China.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1007/s10823-021-09430-2
Language English
Journal Journal of cross-cultural gerontology

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