Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Adult Children’s Monitoring, Knowledge, and Intergenerational Ambivalence
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Monitoring aging parents' daily life is an essential task for adult children to ensure their parents’ health and safety. The current study examined domains of parents' lives that adult children monitored as caregivers. Based on social domain theory (Smetana, 1999), we hypothesized that adult children would monitor parents’ health and safety issues as respecting parents’ autonomy in other issues. The study also examined how adult children’s belief in need for monitoring and their perception of having actual knowledge of their parents’ behaviors and thoughts would relate to the intensity of their intergenerational ambivalence. Adults who had at least one living parent (N=398, Mage=60, SD=7.7, range 45-77) participated in online surveys. Issues of parents' lives that adult children monitored were categorized into four domains by factor analysis: parents' financial safety, health and physical safety, substance use, and plans with other adult children. A series of regression analyses revealed that adult children's sense of need to know about parents' financial safety was associated with lower ambivalence, B=-.60, SE=.18, β=-.23, p=.001, whereas parents’ physical safety was associated with greater ambivalence, B=.42, SE=.19, β =.17, p=.03. Adult children's perception of their knowledge about parents' financial safety was positively associated with their ambivalence, B=.58, SE=.20, β=.22, p=.004, whereas adult children's perception of parents' physical safety was negatively associated with their ambivalence, B=-.42, SE=.21, β=-.14, p=.05. Different meanings of different types of parents' safety issues for adult children as their caregivers and suggestions for future research will be discussed.
Title: Adult Children’s Monitoring, Knowledge, and Intergenerational Ambivalence
Description:
Abstract
Monitoring aging parents' daily life is an essential task for adult children to ensure their parents’ health and safety.
The current study examined domains of parents' lives that adult children monitored as caregivers.
Based on social domain theory (Smetana, 1999), we hypothesized that adult children would monitor parents’ health and safety issues as respecting parents’ autonomy in other issues.
The study also examined how adult children’s belief in need for monitoring and their perception of having actual knowledge of their parents’ behaviors and thoughts would relate to the intensity of their intergenerational ambivalence.
Adults who had at least one living parent (N=398, Mage=60, SD=7.
7, range 45-77) participated in online surveys.
Issues of parents' lives that adult children monitored were categorized into four domains by factor analysis: parents' financial safety, health and physical safety, substance use, and plans with other adult children.
A series of regression analyses revealed that adult children's sense of need to know about parents' financial safety was associated with lower ambivalence, B=-.
60, SE=.
18, β=-.
23, p=.
001, whereas parents’ physical safety was associated with greater ambivalence, B=.
42, SE=.
19, β =.
17, p=.
03.
Adult children's perception of their knowledge about parents' financial safety was positively associated with their ambivalence, B=.
58, SE=.
20, β=.
22, p=.
004, whereas adult children's perception of parents' physical safety was negatively associated with their ambivalence, B=-.
42, SE=.
21, β=-.
14, p=.
05.
Different meanings of different types of parents' safety issues for adult children as their caregivers and suggestions for future research will be discussed.
Related Results
Building Intergenerational Relationships with Mutual Benefits at North Port Seventh-day Adventist Church, Breath of Life Seventh-day Adventist Church, and Conyers Seventh-day Adventist Church
Building Intergenerational Relationships with Mutual Benefits at North Port Seventh-day Adventist Church, Breath of Life Seventh-day Adventist Church, and Conyers Seventh-day Adventist Church
Problem Within our churches, North Port Seventh-day Adventist Church (North Port, Florida), Breath of Life Seventh-day Adventist Church (Fort Washington, Maryland), and Conyers Se...
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
Climate Change and Children
Australian children are uniquely situated in a vast landscape that varies drastically across locations. Spanning multiple climatic zones—from cool tempe...
Intergenerational chronic undernutrition pattern and determinants in Ethiopia: a multilevel and spatial analysis of EDHS data (2000–2016)
Intergenerational chronic undernutrition pattern and determinants in Ethiopia: a multilevel and spatial analysis of EDHS data (2000–2016)
IntroductionIntergenerational chronic undernutrition is a condition where both mothers and children experience poor nutrition, leading to a cycle of malnutrition that affects multi...
ASSOCIATION BETWEEN OLDER PARENTS’ INFORMATION SHARING AND THEIR INTERGENERATIONAL AMBIVALENCE
ASSOCIATION BETWEEN OLDER PARENTS’ INFORMATION SHARING AND THEIR INTERGENERATIONAL AMBIVALENCE
Abstract
The current study examined (1) the relation between older parents’ information sharing of their life issues with their children as the primary helpers (help...
Understanding Intergenerational Interactions and Programmes in Singapore: A Comparative Analysis of Young Adults and Older Adults’ Perspectives
Understanding Intergenerational Interactions and Programmes in Singapore: A Comparative Analysis of Young Adults and Older Adults’ Perspectives
Abstract
Introduction
As the population rapidly ages, older adults are faced with a multitude of physical, psychological, and social challenges that limit their ability to ...
Benefits of Being Ambivalent: The Relationship between Trait Ambivalence and Attribution Biases
Benefits of Being Ambivalent: The Relationship between Trait Ambivalence and Attribution Biases
Ambivalence refers to the experience of having both positive and negative thoughts and feelings at the same time about the same object, person, or issue. Although ambivalence resea...
Lapse kuvandist täiskasvanute ja laste endi pilgu läbi
Lapse kuvandist täiskasvanute ja laste endi pilgu läbi
The article analyses the image of the child as perceived from the perspective of children and adults and determines to what extent the perceptions vary between the children and adu...
Daniela Fenu Foerch: interview by Márcia Fusaro and Ana Maria Haddad Baptista
Daniela Fenu Foerch: interview by Márcia Fusaro and Ana Maria Haddad Baptista
EccoS Journal: Dr Foerch thank you very much for this interview. Could you start telling us about your professional background and what the WeFEEL project is?
Daniela Fenu Foerch:...

