Childhood Adversities and Later-life Loneliness: Mediating Roles of Health and Intergenerational Relationships
Ying Xu, Merril Silverstein, Tianqi Zhou, Xiaoyu Fu

TL;DR
This study explores how childhood hardships in rural China are linked to loneliness in older age, with health and family bonds playing key roles.
Contribution
The study reveals new evidence on how childhood adversities affect later-life loneliness through health and intergenerational relationships in rural China.
Findings
Childhood adversities were strongly associated with increased loneliness in older adults.
Self-rated health partially mediated the link between childhood adversities and loneliness.
Emotional closeness with adult children also partially mediated this relationship.
Abstract
Social scientists have long recognized the significance of early-life experiences for later-life well-being. However, the implications of these early-life experiences on loneliness in later life have been largely overlooked. To address this gap, this study investigates the association between childhood adversities (CAs: hunger, lack of medical care, parental loss, and poor health) and later-life loneliness among older adults in rural China, with a focus on the mediating roles of self-rated health and emotional closeness with adult children. Using data from the 2021 wave of the Longitudinal Study of Older Adults in Anhui Province (N = 1,554; males = 810, females = 744), we conducted regression-based mediation analysis for two mediators separately, controlling for respondent age, gender, marital status, educational level, living arrangement, and instrumental activities of daily living.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Health disparities and outcomes · Aging and Gerontology Research
