Living Arrangements, Family Support, and Health Outcomes Among Older Adults in China
Sijiu Wang, Rui Wu

TL;DR
This study explores how living arrangements and family support affect the health of older adults in China, finding that proximity to children and regular contact improve health outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a nuanced analysis of how different living arrangements and specific family support mechanisms influence health outcomes in older Chinese adults.
Findings
Living alone with nearby children and living with a spouse are linked to better self-rated and mental health.
Regular child contact and financial support improve mental and functional health outcomes.
Living with others beyond a spouse is associated with improved mental health.
Abstract
As demographic shifts and urbanization reshape family structures in China, understanding the relationship between living arrangements and health outcomes among older adults is critical. This study examines how different living arrangements influence self-rated health, mental health, and functional status, and whether these effects are mediated by family support. Using three waves (2013, 2015, and 2018) of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), we categorized living arrangements into four groups: living alone without children in the same city, living alone with children nearby, living with a spouse only, and living with others beyond a spouse. Lagged models addressed potential reverse causality, while mediation analyses explored three key support mechanisms: informal care, frequency of child contact (in-person and technology-based), and financial support. Findings…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Health disparities and outcomes · Family Dynamics and Relationships
