Clinical Gerontologist
Volume 15, Issue 4, 1995, Pages 3-20

A Cross-Cultural Understanding of Depression Among Elderly Korean Immigrants: Prevalence, Symptoms and Diagnosis (Article)

Pang K.Y.*
  • a College of Nursing, Howard University, Washington, DC, 20059, United States

Abstract

In the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, both the DIS-III and Lee's version of the DIS-III, modified for Koreans living in Korea, were administered to 674 elderly Korean immigrants. Subsequently, a semi-structured interview guide for depression, with open-ended questions designed explicitly for Korean immigrants, was administered to 34 of the people judged to be depressed under the Korean DIS-III and 35 people randomly selected from the group that scored as not depressed under the Korean DIS-III. With the DIS-III, the lifetime prevalence rate for these immigrants was 7.12%; with Lee's modified version, the rate rose to 8.31%. The semi-structured interview guide for depression, however, showed loneliness, sadness, and somatic symptoms among both groups of people, those judged depressed and those judged not depressed. Clinicians working with elderly Korean immigrants consequently are advised to ask questions that specifically focus on loneliness, family harmony, health problems and popular Korean illnesses before ruling out depression. © 1995 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

rating scale immigrant depression human controlled study Aged interview headache male female questionnaire cultural factor clinical article prevalence Article adult epigastric pain Loneliness somatization Korea

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0029099355&doi=10.1300%2fJ018v15n04_02&partnerID=40&md5=9e37379baaf9e8f7e371c1a9d8af27d5

DOI: 10.1300/J018v15n04_02
ISSN: 07317115
Cited by: 22
Original Language: English