(Not) again: exploring the impact of second parental dissolution on the mental health of emerging adults

Publication type

Journal Article

Series Number

Authors

Publication date

January 22, 2026

Summary:

Parental dissolution generally affects the mental health of children. Given the prevalence of second parental dissolutions, we examine how family instability affects the mental health of emerging adults. Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study (including the British Household Panel Study and Understanding Society), we employ propensity score matching to compare four groups: those experiencing none, one early, one late or two parental dissolutions. We test four hypotheses positing a greater negative effect of a second dissolution related to the order of the divorce, age, gender and siblingship size. Overall, we find no statistically significant differences in mental health among the four groups, including those who experienced no parental dissolution. Consequently, all hypotheses are rejected. Results indicate that those experiencing two separations show greater mental health homogeneity compared to those experiencing one. This result can be the start of further exploration of this complex topic.

Published in

Families, Relationships and Societies

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1332/20467435Y2025D000000081

ISSN

20467435

Subjects

Notes

© Authors 2026

Online Early

#588974

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