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Anxiety about aging,resilience and health Status among Chinese older adults: Findings from Honolulu and Wuhan
Affiliation:1. Disparities Research Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital (MA, MCG, SLM, YW, LH, LF, YG, UG, ZR, JYW, CKC), Boston, MA;2. Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School (MA), Boston, MA;3. Departments of Physical Medicine, Rehabilitation and Sports Medicine and Physiology and Biophysics, University of Puerto Rico (WF), Río Piedras, Puerto Rico;4. Department of Population Health, Department of Medicine, New York University School of Medicine (CTS), New York, NY;5. Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital (RZI, GP), Boston, MA;6. Ariadne Labs, Brigham and Women''s Hospital, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health (EV), Boston, MA;7. Department of Psychology, West Chester University of Pennsylvania (JP), West Chester, PA;8. Greater Boston Chinese Golden Age Center (MC), Boston, MA;9. Hamilton Madison House (JW), New York, NY;10. Department of Psychology, University of Puerto Rico (AJ), San Juan, Puerto Rico;11. The Mongan Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital (SJB), Boston, MA;12. Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University (ND), New York, NY;13. Department of Psychology, New York University (PES), New York, NY
Abstract:A growing body of literature found that anxiety about aging is related to health and well-being of older adults. However, very few studies have been conducted on Chinese older adults residing in different countries and examined the role of resilience. Using the Pearlin’s Stress Process Model, this study aims to fill in this gap by examining the relationship between anxiety about aging as the stressor and health status among Chinese older adults living in Honolulu, the United States (N = 292) and Wuhan, China (N = 532). The survey data were collected through June 2017 to September 2018, using snowball and convenience sampling strategy. The moderating role of resilience on the focal relationship is also explored. Results showed that for both samples, the negative relationship between anxiety about aging and self-rated health was significantly moderated by resilience (18 % and 13 %, respectively), implying the stress-buffering role of resilience. Although both mean levels of resilience and anxiety about aging were lower for the Honolulu sample, the moderating effect appeared to be stronger, implying that older adults in the Honolulu sample might rely more on psychological resources such as resilience in coping with stressors, compared with their counterparts in Wuhan. However, the moderating effect of resilience did not work for the association between anxiety about aging and number of chronic conditions for both samples. Our findings suggest that future research needs to take into account both social and psychological resources when examining anxiety about aging and health status among Chinese older adults residing in different cultural contexts.
Keywords:Anxiety about aging  Resilience  Self-rated health  Chronic conditions  Cultural comparison
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