Clinical excellence for nurse practitioners : the international journal of NPACE
Volume 2, Issue 2, 1998, Pages 96-101

The perceived life stressors among elderly Chinese immigrants: are they different from those of other elderly Americans? (Article)

Lee A.A.* , Ellenbecker C.H.
  • a Paoli Memorial Hospital, Malvern, Pennsylvania, United States
  • b Paoli Memorial Hospital, Malvern, Pennsylvania, United States

Abstract

This is a descriptive study examining the perceived life stressors among elderly Chinese immigrants and comparing their stressors to those experienced by other elderly Americans. Lazarus and Folkman's stress theory and Roy's adaptation model were used as the theoretical basis for this study. Based on this framework, it was predicted that elderly Chinese immigrants would report more life stressors than elderly Americans, because they experience a changing cultural environment along with the aging process. The sample was a convenience sample of 30 elderly people from two Chinese churches in one northeastern metropolitan city. Participants were asked to describe a stressful event that they had experienced within the past month. Data were collected by a bilingual (Chinese and English) interviewer using open-ended questions. The research design was based on Manfredi and Pickett's (1987) research exploring the stressors among elderly Americans, and those research results provide the comparison data for this study. The findings suggest that the amount and sources of stress reported by elderly Chinese immigrants are different from those reported by other elderly Americans. Additional studies are needed to identify the coping strategies used by elderly Chinese immigrants. These findings have implications for gerontologists, policy makers, community healthcare providers, and the Chinese immigrant population.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

China psychological aspect nursing methodology research human Life Change Events middle aged life event Aged Adaptation, Psychological ethnology New England United States Humans model Asian Americans male Asian American female Aged, 80 and over adaptive behavior questionnaire Article Questionnaires migration Emigration and Immigration attitude to health Models, Nursing

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0032010031&partnerID=40&md5=ef5aa734a5d1c6df5be89f1eba43ad69

ISSN: 10852360
Cited by: 7
Original Language: English