Living Arrangements and Psychological Well-Being of the Older Adults After the Economic Transition in Vietnam

Type Journal Article - Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
Title Living Arrangements and Psychological Well-Being of the Older Adults After the Economic Transition in Vietnam
Author(s)
Volume 70
Issue 6
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 957-968
URL https://academic.oup.com/psychsocgerontology/article/70/6/957/2605019/Living-Arrangements-and-Psycho​logical-Well-Being
Abstract
Objectives:
We examine the relationship between living arrangements and psychological well-being of the older adults in Vietnam, where there is an influence of Confucian values and a lack of close substitutes for family care of the older adults, by exploiting a great deal of regional variation in economic development. We also examine the role of living arrangements in well-being differentials across regions.
Method:
We estimate a triangular simultaneous-equation discrete-response model, which accounts for the simultaneity between living arrangements and psychological well-being (happiness, depression, loneliness, poor appetite, and sleep disorder), using a nationally representative sample of 2,225 adults aged 60 and older drawn from the 2011 Vietnam Aging Survey.
Results:
Intergenerational coresidence significantly increases the psychological well-being of the older adults in Vietnam. The results are fairly robust, even after taking quasi-coresidence into account, decomposing the psychological well-being index into each affect and symptom, and splitting the sample by gender.
Discussion:
Changes in living arrangements induced by differences in labor market opportunities in neighboring regions have resulted in significant differences in psychological well-being among the older adults. The findings point to the need for attention to the mental health of elderly parents left behind in less economically developed regions.

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