Journal article
A cross-sectional study of coping resources and mental health of Chinese older adults in the United States
Aging & mental health, Vol.22(11), pp.1448-1455
11/02/2018
DOI: 10.1080/13607863.2017.1364345
PMCID: PMC6123276
PMID: 28812377
Abstract
Objectives: This study examined the potential influence of coping resources at individual (sense of mastery), family (spousal and family support, children's filial piety), and community levels (community cohesion) on the mental health (depression, anxiety) of U.S. Chinese older adults.
Methods: The data were derived from the Population Study of Chinese Elderly in Chicago (N= 3,159). Negative binomial regressions were performed to predict depression and anxiety, respectively, by entering the three sets of coping resources separately and jointly, controlling for socio-demographic and acculturation variables.
Results: Stronger sense of mastery and greater perception of children's filial piety were associated with better mental health outcomes. Spousal support was not associated with any mental health outomes, and family support was actually assciated with greater depression and anxiety. Stronger community cohesion was associated with fewer depressive symptoms but greater anxiety.
Conclusion: Older immigrants' sense of control and perception that children adhere to traditional family norms are important mental health protective factors. Whereas depending on families for support may compromise their well-being, community cohesion could be a double-edged sword for their mental health. Future studies shall further disentangle the associations among sense of mastery, reliance on family and ethnic enclaves for support, and older immigrants' well-being.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- A cross-sectional study of coping resources and mental health of Chinese older adults in the United States
- Creators
- Man Guo - University of IowaNadia Sabbagh Steinberg - University of IowaXinqi Dong - Rush University Medical CenterAgnes Tiwari - University of Hong Kong
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Aging & mental health, Vol.22(11), pp.1448-1455
- DOI
- 10.1080/13607863.2017.1364345
- PMID
- 28812377
- PMCID
- PMC6123276
- NLM abbreviation
- Aging Ment Health
- ISSN
- 1360-7863
- eISSN
- 1364-6915
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Grant note
- R01 AG042318, R01 MD006173, R01CA163830, R34MH100443, R34MH100393, P20CA165588, R24MD001650, RC4AG039085 / National Institute on Aging (10.13039/100000049)
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 11/02/2018
- Academic Unit
- School of Social Work
- Record Identifier
- 9984307150602771
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