# Intergenerational Relation Trajectories in Multi-Child Families and Depressive Symptoms of Older Parents in China

**Authors:** Chang Yu, Jiaowei Gong, Emma Zang

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1751 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how relationships between older Chinese parents and their children change over time and how these changes affect parents' mental health, especially for those with lower socioeconomic status.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel approach to analyzing intergenerational relationship trajectories in multi-child families and their mental health impacts.

## Key findings

- Four distinct relationship trajectories were identified, including steadily and rapidly strengthening relationships linked to fewer depressive symptoms.
- Low-SES parents benefit most from improving intergenerational relationships, showing a stronger mental health impact.
- The worst relationship within a family is the strongest predictor of depressive symptoms in older parents.

## Abstract

While close intergenerational relationships are linked to fewer depressive symptoms in older parents, less is known about how these relationships evolve over time, how different aspects of these relationships (e.g., emotional closeness, economic and housework support, frequency of contact) function together, and how relationships with multiple children in a family shape mental health. This study examines trajectories of intergenerational relationships in multi-child families and their associations with depressive symptoms among older Chinese parents across socioeconomic (SES) groups.

Using nationally representative panel data from the China Longitudinal Aging Social Survey (2014–2020, N = 1,637), we applied group-based trajectory modeling to track changes in intergenerational relationships over six years, considering overall, best, and worst child-parent relationships within families. Linear regressions assessed how these relationship trajectories relate to depressive symptoms among adults aged 60+, with attention to differences by SES (education, income, hukou).

Across average, best, and worst relationships, we identified four trajectories: persistently strained, slight decline with sustained positivity, steadily strengthening, and rapidly strengthening. Compared to persistently strained relationships, steadily and rapidly strengthening relationships were associated with fewer depressive symptoms, particularly for low-SES parents. The worst relationship trajectory best predicted depressive symptoms, while the average trajectory lost significance when controlling for best and worst relationships.

Findings underscore the mental health impact of relationship dynamics, especially for low-SES parents, highlighting the need for government-supported caregiving programs in China.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762194