Older Adults’ Contact Patterns with Family Members During COVID-19: Evidence from the NSHAP COVID Study
Xiaoyu Fu, Merril Silverstein, Catherine Garcia, Ying Xu, Tianqi Zhou

TL;DR
This study explores how older adults changed their communication with family during the pandemic, showing varied patterns of in-person, phone, and digital contact.
Contribution
The study identifies four distinct communication patterns among older adults during the pandemic using latent class analysis.
Findings
Four communication patterns emerged, including increased digital contact and changes in traditional contact modes.
Some older adults maintained high traditional contact, while others increased digital engagement.
Overall contact levels varied, with some experiencing declines despite increased frequency in certain modes.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic significantly disrupted older adults’ social connectedness, prompting many to adopt digital communication technologies to maintain family ties. This study examines distinct patterns of older adults’ family communication, including in-person visits, phone calls, and digital contact (email, social media, and video call), and retrospective assessments of changes in these interactions during the pandemic. Using data from the COVID sub-study of the National Social Life, Health & Aging Project (NSHAP), we applied latent class analysis to identify communication patterns among 2,048 adults aged 60 and over. Four distinct patterns emerged: (1) Moderate Contact with Decreased Frequency, characterized by moderate but declining engagement across all contact modes; (2) High Traditional Contact with Increased Frequency, marked by frequent in-person and phone contact with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Use by Older Adults · Aging and Gerontology Research · Assistive Technology in Communication and Mobility
