Pandemic Affected Mental Health of Grandparents Who Stopped Caregiving for Grandchildren

For Immediate Release
October 6, 2022

Contact: Todd Kluss
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
(202) 587-2839

Grandparents who stopped looking after their grandchildren during the COVID-19 pandemic were considerably more likely to experience depressive symptoms compared to those who continued to care for their grandchildren, finds a new UCL-led study titled “Changes in Grandparental Childcare During the Pandemic and Mental Health: Evidence from England.”

The study, published in The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, also found that grandparents in England who either stopped or reduced the amount of time spent caring for their grandchildren reported lower life satisfaction and quality of life.

Researchers examined data from a sample of 2,468 grandparents over the age of 50 with grandchildren under the age of 15 from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA).

Right before the pandemic outbreak, in February 2020, 52 percent of the grandparents looked after their grandchildren. However, during the first year of the pandemic older people were advised by the government to stay indoors and limit their in-person interactions with others to reduce the risk of catching COVID-19. This included staying away from grandchildren and younger people, with former Health Secretary Matt Hancock using the phrase “don’t kill your gran” in a BBC radio interview.

Perhaps partly as a result, 22 percent of grandparents reported that their engagement in grandchild care was mostly reduced compared to pre-pandemic, and around 10 percent stopped caring for their grandchildren entirely over the first nine months of the pandemic.

In November and December 2020, more than a third (34.3 percent) of grandparents who stopped looking after their grandchildren throughout the first nine months of the pandemic reported high levels of depressive symptoms, such as feeling sad or having restless sleep, compared to 26 percent of those who continued to look after grandchildren. They also reported lower life satisfaction, and a lower quality of life.

The researchers were able to account for pre-pandemic mental and physical health, socioeconomic and demographic characteristics, as well as social contacts with family and friends and loneliness during the pandemic to better understand if the relationships observed between reduction in grandchild care provision and poorer mental health were driven by pre-existing conditions or socioeconomic adversity.

Lead author Giorgio Di Gessa, PhD, of the UCL Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care said, “Grandparents who were unable to see and spend time with their grandchildren for reasons beyond their control might have been frustrated and distressed about it, leading to negative consequences for their mental health.

“Looking after grandchildren may provide grandparents with emotional gratification and a sense of usefulness and competence, thereby enhancing life satisfaction. Grandparents’ involvement in such a family activity may also provide them with a sense of value and attachment, thereby strengthening intergenerational relationships and positive emotional exchanges that might benefit their mental health.”

Co-author Bruno Arpino, PhD of the University of Florence said, “We know from previous studies that the pandemic and policies restricting human interaction have posed a greater risk to mental health and well-being. Few studies, however, have so far looked at grandparents despite their vital role in family life and the potential health benefits for grandparents to look after grandchildren.”

Co-author Valeria Bordone, PhD, of the University of Vienna added, “If physical distancing policies remain a core strategy to protect individuals at higher risk from COVID-19 variants or indeed in a future pandemic, attention should be paid to addressing the mental health and wider needs of older people who may suffer from the loss of meaningful roles in their family and society.”

ELSA is supported by the National Institute on Aging and a consortium of UK Government departments coordinated by the National Institute for Health Research. ELSA does not record detailed information about the kind of childcare grandparents provide; instead it asks generic questions linked to the amount of time spent looking after grandchildren. It also does not collect information on parents’ employment or other childcare arrangements. ELSA also did not collect information about respondents’ ability to cope with uncertainty due to COVID-19 or personality characteristics that may leave them vulnerable to higher levels of depression in uncertain times and might have influenced their choices of grandparental childcare provision during the pandemic. This study only considers data from one wave of the pandemic.

###

The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences is a peer-reviewed publication of The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), the nation's oldest and largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to research, education, and practice in the field of aging. The principal mission of the Society — and its 5,500+ members — is to advance the study of aging and disseminate information among scientists, decision makers, and the general public. GSA’s structure also includes a policy institute, the National Academy on an Aging Society.