Offspring Education and Parents' COVID-19 Vaccination.

Year of Publication
2025
Author
Journal
Res Aging
Number of Pages
1640275251319325
ISSN Number
1552-7573
Abstract

Studies on COVID-19 vaccine uptake often focus on individual characteristics; however, fewer studies have assessed how the characteristics of family members might matter for vaccine decisions. This study employs a "social foreground" perspective to ask how the resources of adult children are associated with COVID-19 vaccine uptake among older adult parents. Using data from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study ( = 8086), we find that having a most-educated child who completes college is positively associated with parents' vaccine uptake when compared to having a most-educated child who did not complete college. This association is driven by respondents who themselves have a high school education or less, supporting resource substitution theory. Findings from this study extend the social foreground perspective to offer new insight into the health behaviors of older adults during pandemics.

Date Published
2025 Feb 19
DOI
10.1177/01640275251319325
Alternate Journal
Res Aging
PMID
39970323
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