S. They found general support forJ Marriage Fam. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 August 23.NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptUmberson et al.Pagetheir hypotheses: Negative treatment of parents by children was associated with more depression and anger in parents, but effects on depression were limited to Blacks, and effects on anger were limited to women. Negative events in adult children’s lives (e.g., unemployment) also affected order CPI-455 Blacks more than Whites. Other studies have considered that adult children may develop or continue to experience a range of developmental, behavioral, mental health, or physical health problems that are stressful for aging parents. Among 64- to 65-year-old participants in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study in 2004, roughly 3 T0901317 site reported that they had a child with a mental illness including severe depression and about 2.4 report having a child with a developmental disability. Greenfield and Marks (2006) found that 8 of adult child respondents reported alcohol or substance abuse problems and 38 reported financial problems in a national sample. Greenfield and Marks’s cross-sectional analysis revealed that adult children’s problems (e.g., alcohol, emotional, at school or work, legal) were associated with lower levels of psychological well-being (across several measures of well-being) and that these effects were magnified for unmarried parents (although they found no gender differences in effects). Recent work emphasized the life course view of linked lives and the cumulative effect of parenting experiences on well-being. Ha et al. (2008) considered how having children with developmental or mental health problems affects parental well-being at different stages of the life course. Although they found that parents of impaired children exhibited higher levels of negative affect, more somatic symptoms, and lower psychological well-being than parents of unimpaired children, their results also suggested support for an adaptation model in that adverse effects attenuated with age. These results are limited by a cross-sectional design, but this study suggests specific ways that parenting stress may shape parent well-being throughout the life course. K.M. Green, Ensminger, Robertson, and Juon (2006) also addressed life course effects of children’s problems. They analyzed longitudinal data spanning more than 30 years to show that more recent incarceration of adult sons was associated with greater psychological distress for older African American mothers–also suggesting that effects may attenuate with time. This effect was further mediated by parents’ social context as shaped by financial strain and a greater burden of grandparenting. Although it is rare for children to precede their parents in death, this loss has a lasting impact on parents, regardless of its timing in the life course. Rogers, Floyd, Seltzer, Greenberg, and Hong’s (2008) crosssectional analysis showed that the death of a child from infancy through age 34 (average age, 18) was associated with lower levels of parents’ psychological and physical well-being many years beyond the loss. Although these effects were diminished by having additional children at the time of death, they were not affected by the number of years that had passed since the death. Taken together, these studies show how earlier stressful experiences with children may influence long-term health and wellbeing of parents. Ambivalence An additional s.S. They found general support forJ Marriage Fam. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 August 23.NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptUmberson et al.Pagetheir hypotheses: Negative treatment of parents by children was associated with more depression and anger in parents, but effects on depression were limited to Blacks, and effects on anger were limited to women. Negative events in adult children’s lives (e.g., unemployment) also affected Blacks more than Whites. Other studies have considered that adult children may develop or continue to experience a range of developmental, behavioral, mental health, or physical health problems that are stressful for aging parents. Among 64- to 65-year-old participants in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study in 2004, roughly 3 reported that they had a child with a mental illness including severe depression and about 2.4 report having a child with a developmental disability. Greenfield and Marks (2006) found that 8 of adult child respondents reported alcohol or substance abuse problems and 38 reported financial problems in a national sample. Greenfield and Marks’s cross-sectional analysis revealed that adult children’s problems (e.g., alcohol, emotional, at school or work, legal) were associated with lower levels of psychological well-being (across several measures of well-being) and that these effects were magnified for unmarried parents (although they found no gender differences in effects). Recent work emphasized the life course view of linked lives and the cumulative effect of parenting experiences on well-being. Ha et al. (2008) considered how having children with developmental or mental health problems affects parental well-being at different stages of the life course. Although they found that parents of impaired children exhibited higher levels of negative affect, more somatic symptoms, and lower psychological well-being than parents of unimpaired children, their results also suggested support for an adaptation model in that adverse effects attenuated with age. These results are limited by a cross-sectional design, but this study suggests specific ways that parenting stress may shape parent well-being throughout the life course. K.M. Green, Ensminger, Robertson, and Juon (2006) also addressed life course effects of children’s problems. They analyzed longitudinal data spanning more than 30 years to show that more recent incarceration of adult sons was associated with greater psychological distress for older African American mothers–also suggesting that effects may attenuate with time. This effect was further mediated by parents’ social context as shaped by financial strain and a greater burden of grandparenting. Although it is rare for children to precede their parents in death, this loss has a lasting impact on parents, regardless of its timing in the life course. Rogers, Floyd, Seltzer, Greenberg, and Hong’s (2008) crosssectional analysis showed that the death of a child from infancy through age 34 (average age, 18) was associated with lower levels of parents’ psychological and physical well-being many years beyond the loss. Although these effects were diminished by having additional children at the time of death, they were not affected by the number of years that had passed since the death. Taken together, these studies show how earlier stressful experiences with children may influence long-term health and wellbeing of parents. Ambivalence An additional s.