4.4 Article

Cohabitation dissolution and psychological distress among young adults: The role of parenthood and gender

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 102, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2021.102626

Keywords

Cohabitation dissolution; Parenthood; Gender; Depressive symptoms; Binge drinking behaviors; Life course perspective

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Cohabitation dissolution has a negative impact on the mental health of young adults, increasing depressive symptoms for both genders and leading to increased binge drinking behaviors for men only. The presence of children during cohabitation dissolution amplifies the impact on depressive symptoms for women, but this effect diminishes as young women age.
Cohabitation has become a normative experience for American young adults and a common setting for childbearing in recent decades. However, the high dissolution rate of cohabitation exposes young adults to the potential stress of intimate relationship dissolution and single parenthood during early adulthood. Drawing on data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, we apply growth curve models to analyze how cohabitation dissolution associates with trajectories of depressive symptoms and binge drinking behaviors for young adults (aged 17 to 35). We investigate how the presence of children moderates this association for men and women. We find that cohabitation dissolution is associated with increased depressive symptoms for both men and women. However, cohabitation dissolution is only positively associated with binge drinking behaviors for men, and a significant gender difference is observed. The presence of children when cohabitation dissolves strengthens the positive association between cohabitation dissolution and depressive symptoms among women, and this positive moderation fades away as young women age. These findings suggest that gender differences in the association of cohabitation dissolution with psychological distress are contingent on the types of psychological distress under consideration and also reveal that cohabitation dissolution intertwined with non-marital parenthood is harmful to mental health, especially for young women.

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