International Journal of Aging and Human Development
Volume 32, Issue 2, 1991, Pages 91-102

Family living arrangement and social adjustment among three ethnic groups of elderly Indochinese refugees (Article)

Tran T.V.
  • a Boston College, 216 MacGuinn Hall, Chestnutt Hill, MA 02167, United States

Abstract

This study examines family living arrangement and social adjustment in an area probability sample of 258 elderly Indochinese refugees fifty-five years or older in the United States. Data were collected in 1982 from five locations representing the diversity of the Indochinese refugee communities in the United States. Multiple regression analysis was used. The findings reveal that elderly refugees who lived within the nuclear or extended family had a better sense of social adjustment than those living outside the family context. Elderly refugees who lived in overcrowded households and in households that had children under the age of sixteen experienced a poorer sense of adjustment. Ethnicity had no significant relationship with social adjustment. Finally, among six control variables, age had a significant relationship that indicates that older refugees had a poorer sense of adjustment than their younger counterparts.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

male female Aged Article family study human human experiment sociology

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0026078381&doi=10.2190%2fA32T-6FVW-42M4-NV1T&partnerID=40&md5=8e0bb2fe05dcba5dee5227eff00d2eda

DOI: 10.2190/A32T-6FVW-42M4-NV1T
ISSN: 00914150
Cited by: 19
Original Language: English