Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?

IntroductionLiving alone, which has become increasingly common in China, weakens the emotional connections between parents and children—fundamental family functions in Confucianism. This trend has raised concerns regarding depression among older adults living alone. Numerous researchers have evaluat...

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Main Authors: Haolin Wang, Bing Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1553080/full
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author Haolin Wang
Bing Sun
author_facet Haolin Wang
Bing Sun
author_sort Haolin Wang
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionLiving alone, which has become increasingly common in China, weakens the emotional connections between parents and children—fundamental family functions in Confucianism. This trend has raised concerns regarding depression among older adults living alone. Numerous researchers have evaluated the influence of living alone on depression among older adults in different cultures. However, the consensus has yet to be reached.MethodsThis study adopted a fixed effects model to analyze three sets of data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study based on different family cultures reflected by living arrangements.ResultsLiving alone reduced depression among older adults by 0.267 (CES-D, 10–40). The effects of living alone on depression among older adults predominantly originate from living close to their children. This lifestyle effectively balances the need for individual independence and the demand for maintaining tight family relationships and reconciles intergenerational family conflict. Differences between rural and urban areas were also identified. This search indicated that living alone improved depression in rural older adults; however, no significant effects were found for urban older adults.DiscussionAs living close to their children is conducive to improving depression among older adults, policymakers are advised to focus on local employment. Special emphasis should be placed on incentivizing migrant workers to return to their rural hometowns for entrepreneurship or employment.
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spelling doaj-art-dfe82dc29b9c43848168ff10c0dd55362025-08-20T03:11:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782025-02-011610.3389/fpsyg.2025.15530801553080Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?Haolin WangBing SunIntroductionLiving alone, which has become increasingly common in China, weakens the emotional connections between parents and children—fundamental family functions in Confucianism. This trend has raised concerns regarding depression among older adults living alone. Numerous researchers have evaluated the influence of living alone on depression among older adults in different cultures. However, the consensus has yet to be reached.MethodsThis study adopted a fixed effects model to analyze three sets of data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study based on different family cultures reflected by living arrangements.ResultsLiving alone reduced depression among older adults by 0.267 (CES-D, 10–40). The effects of living alone on depression among older adults predominantly originate from living close to their children. This lifestyle effectively balances the need for individual independence and the demand for maintaining tight family relationships and reconciles intergenerational family conflict. Differences between rural and urban areas were also identified. This search indicated that living alone improved depression in rural older adults; however, no significant effects were found for urban older adults.DiscussionAs living close to their children is conducive to improving depression among older adults, policymakers are advised to focus on local employment. Special emphasis should be placed on incentivizing migrant workers to return to their rural hometowns for entrepreneurship or employment.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1553080/fullliving arrangementsolder adultsdepressionfamily culturesintergenerational gap
spellingShingle Haolin Wang
Bing Sun
Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
Frontiers in Psychology
living arrangements
older adults
depression
family cultures
intergenerational gap
title Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
title_full Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
title_fullStr Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
title_full_unstemmed Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
title_short Does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults?
title_sort does living alone exacerbate depression in older adults
topic living arrangements
older adults
depression
family cultures
intergenerational gap
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1553080/full
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