International Journal of Aging and Human Development
Volume 61, Issue 2, 2005, Pages 105-121

Examining the types of social support and the actual sources of support in older Chinese and Korean immigrants (Article)

Wong S.T.* , Yoo G.J. , Stewart A.L.
  • a University of British Columbia School of Nursing, Culture, Gender, and Health Unit, Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, Canada, University of British Columbia, School of Nursing, 2211 Wesbrook Mall, T-255, Vancouver, BC V6T 2B5, Canada
  • b San Francisco State University, CA, United States
  • c University of California, San Francisco, CA, United States

Abstract

This study explored social support domains and actual sources of support for older Chinese and Korean immigrants and compared them to the traditional domains based on mainly White, middle class populations. Fifty-two older Cantonese and Korean speaking immigrants participated in one of eight focus groups. We identified four similar domains: tangible, information/advice, emotional support, and companionship. We also identified needing language support which is relevant for non-English speaking minority populations. Participants discussed not needing emotional support. These Chinese and Korean immigrants had a small number of actual sources of support, relying mainly on adult children for help with personal situations (e.g., carrying heavy groceries, communicating with physicians) and friends for general information/advice (e.g., learning how to speak English, applying for citizenship) and companionship. Immigrant Asians are caught between two different traditions; one that is strongly kinship oriented where needs and desires are subordinated to the interests of the family and one that values independence and celebrates individuality. Despite their reticence in asking for help outside the family, elders are seeking help from other sources, such as ethnic churches and the government. © 2005, Baywood Publishing Co., Inc.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

doctor patient relation China sibling immigrant Chinese task performance interpersonal communication human friend middle aged controlled study Aged Adaptation, Psychological social support language ethnology speech United States social status Humans information male counseling female Aged, 80 and over stress population research Article emotion group psychology adult human experiment age distribution normal human Emigration and Immigration Focus Groups Learning Korea

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-22244484119&doi=10.2190%2fAJ62-QQKT-YJ47-B1T8&partnerID=40&md5=4fdebade4401516637acca07a0b7c58f

DOI: 10.2190/AJ62-QQKT-YJ47-B1T8
ISSN: 00914150
Cited by: 60
Original Language: English