Intergenerational and digital solidarity: Associations with depressive symptoms during the COVID‐19 pandemic

Author:

Hwang Woosang1ORCID,Hadi Narges1,Brown Maria T.2,Silverstein Merril3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Development and Family Sciences Texas Tech University Lubbock Texas USA

2. School of Social Work and Aging Studies Institute Syracuse University Syracuse New York USA

3. Department of Human Development and Family Science, Department of Sociology, and Aging Studies Institute Syracuse University Syracuse New York USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWe aimed to explore dyadic latent classes of intergenerational solidarity with digital communication (texting, video call, and social media interaction) among older parent and adult child pairs during the COVID‐19 pandemic, and whether derived dyadic latent classes were associated with older parents' and adult children's depressive symptoms.BackgroundPrevious studies have not considered how digital communication fits with the established intergenerational solidarity paradigm. Consequently, we know little about how the use of digital communication creates new types of intergenerational solidarity between older parents and adult children, and how they are associated with their depressive symptoms during the pandemic.MethodsUsing data from the 2022 survey of the Longitudinal Study of Generations (LSOG), the analysis took a dyadic‐centered approach and applied a three‐step latent class analysis with 271 mother–child and 190 father–child dyads.ResultsDyadic partners were consistent in their relationship evaluations for the three latent classes identified in both mother–child and father–child dyads: tight‐knit traditional (strong solidarity with frequent in‐person contact), distant‐but‐digitally connected (geographically distant but frequent digital contact), and detached (low solidarity). In mother–child dyads, mothers reported significantly fewer depressive symptoms when they were in tight‐knit traditional and distant‐but‐digitally connected relationships, than those in detached relationships. In father–child dyads, adult children reported significantly fewer depressive symptoms when they were in tight‐knit traditional and distant‐but‐digitally connected relationships, than those in detached relationships.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that digital communication was beneficial for older parents' and adult children's psychological well‐being, depending on parents' gender and generational position during the pandemic.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Retirement Research Foundation

John Templeton Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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