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Coping repertoires and psychological well-being of Chinese older immigrants in the United States
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Coping repertoires and psychological well-being of Chinese older immigrants in the United States

Man Guo, Yi Wang, Jinyu Liu, Meredith Stensland and XinQi Dong
Aging & mental health, Vol.26(7), pp.1385-1394
07/03/2022
DOI: 10.1080/13607863.2021.1944979
PMCID: PMC8738777
PMID: 34233138
url
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/8738777View
Open Access

Abstract

This study examines (1) the overall structures of multifaceted coping resources, that is, coping repertoires, among Chinese older immigrants in the United States, (2) the optimal coping repertoire that is associated with best psychological outcomes of these older immigrants, and (3) the most effective coping repertoire in different adversities. Using data from 2,923 Chinese older immigrants in Chicago, Latent Class Analysis (LCA) was performed to identify the overall coping repertoires of U.S. Chinese older adults. Negative binomial and logistic regressions were used to examine associations between coping repertoires and depression and Quality of Life (QoL), respectively. We further tested whether coping repertories moderate the relationships between adversities in health, economic, and social domains, and the two psychological outcomes. LCA revealed four types of coping repertories: low-resource (43%), spouse-oriented (32%), community-oriented (15%), and multi-source coping (10%). Overall, Chinese older immigrants who had the multi-source coping repertoire reported the best psychological outcomes. The community-oriented and multi-source coping repertories had significantly stronger buffering effects on psychological well-being among individuals with IADL difficulties or low acculturation. However, spouse-oriented coping intensified the association between ADL difficulties and depression, and community-oriented coping intensified the association between poorer subjective health and lower quality of life. This study revealed overall low coping repertories of Chinese older immigrants, suggesting the most optimal coping repertories should consist of both intrinsic and extrinsic coping sources. The findings further show that relying on limited sources might be harmful to older immigrants' mental health.
aging depression migration minority neighborhood cohesion Social support

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