Abstract

Social contacts offer opportunities for provision of emotional and instrumental support that enhances well-being throughout the life course, and the importance of these contacts is especially evident at advanced ages. In this paper, we take a cross-country comparative perspective to examine the association between the number of children and the frequency of social contacts among older people. Using data from the European Quality of Life Survey, we employ multilevel models with cross-level interactions between the number of children and macro-level indicators of filial norms and social policies supporting older people. Our results suggest that older adults with children are more likely than older adults without children to have frequent social interactions, but that the number of children does not affect social contact frequency. The magnitude of the association between having children and social contact frequency varies across European societies. The social contact frequency gap between older adults with children and older adults without children is larger in more familialistic countries with strong filial norms. Our results do not confirm that having children affects social contact frequency less in countries where the state provides more support for older people.

Highlights

  • Children provide people with forms of support that enhance their physical and emotional well-being throughout their life course, which is especially crucial at advanced ages (Albertini and Mencarini 2014; Litwin and Stoeckel 2013; Litwin et al 2015; Shiovitz-Ezra and Litwin 2015)

  • We examined whether the impact of having children on social contact frequency varies according to country-specific filial norms and social policies supporting older people

  • Model 1 includes no According to the results from Model 1, social contact frequency is higher among older adults with children than among older adults without children

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Summary

Introduction

Children provide people with forms of support that enhance their physical and emotional well-being throughout their life course, which is especially crucial at advanced ages (Albertini and Mencarini 2014; Litwin and Stoeckel 2013; Litwin et al 2015; Shiovitz-Ezra and Litwin 2015). A parent–child relationship may last as long as 50–60 years (Antonucci et al 2013). Since European families have declined in size, older people may have fewer close family members with whom they can interact socially (Frejka 2008). Demographic processes have altered the conditions shaping intergenerational relations, and especially social contact patterns among older people. The aim of this paper is to examine whether the number of children affects.

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