The Impact of Living Arrangement Transitions on Depression Among Older Adults: How Transitions and Who Leaves Matter
Yalu Zhang, Xintong Zhao, Meijun Wan

TL;DR
Changing living arrangements, especially losing a spouse or children, increases depression in older adults, with bigger effects when children leave.
Contribution
This study compares mental health impacts of different transitions to living alone, focusing on spouse vs. children loss in older adults.
Findings
Transitioning to living alone significantly increases depressive symptoms in older adults.
Losing a spouse leads to a moderate rise in depression (β = 0.528), while losing children causes a larger increase (β = 1.036).
Rural older adults experience more pronounced effects from these transitions compared to urban residents.
Abstract
Many older adults experience transitions in living arrangements, particularly shifts from cohabitation to living alone due to widowhood or children moving out. These changes can impact mental health by increasing depression risks due to reduced social support. While prior research examines living arrangements and mental health, fewer studies focus on how different transitions to living alone affect depression, particularly between losing a spouse versus children. Using data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) 2011–2020 and fixed-effects models, this study first examined the effect of transitioning from cohabitation to living alone on depression among older adults. Second, it compared the mental health effects between those who transition from living with a spouse to living alone and those who transition from living with children to living alone. Third, it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Family Dynamics and Relationships · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
