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1.
Aging Ment Health ; : 1-8, 2023 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37986033

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study examined education, partnership status, and the moderating role of the lockdown period on social connectedness during the COVID-19 pandemic in a sample of urban African-American older adults. METHODS: Five hundred thirty-four African-American adults living in Detroit (91.0% female, Mage = 74.53) reported demographic information pre-pandemic and answered one social connectedness questionnaire between April and December 2020. RESULTS: Participants interviewed after the lockdown (post-June 2020) reported more loneliness than those interviewed during the lockdown (April-June, 2020). Married/partnered participants reported less loneliness and social isolation. Loneliness did not differ between those with high education levels interviewed during the lockdown compared to post-lockdown. However, among individuals with low education levels, those interviewed after the lockdown reported more loneliness than those interviewed during the lockdown period. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest partnership status is associated with more social connectedness during the pandemic and education accentuates the effects of forced isolation related to loneliness among urban African-American older adults.

2.
SSM Qual Res Health ; 3: 100230, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36785539

ABSTRACT

Background: Black/African Americans are receiving COVID-19 vaccines at much lower rates than whites. However, research is still evolving that explains why these vaccination rates are lower. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of the pandemic among older Black/African Americans, with an emphasis on trust and vaccine intention prior to vaccine development. Methods: Data were collected between July and September 2020 from 8 virtual focus groups in Detroit, MI and San Francisco Bay Area, CA with 33 older African Americans and 11 caregivers of older African Americans with cognitive impairment, supplemented by one virtual meeting with the project's Community Advisory Board. Inductive/deductive content analysis was used to identify themes. Results: Five major themes influenced the intention to be vaccinated: uncertainty, systemic abandonment, decrease in trust, resistance to vaccines, and opportunities for vaccination. The last theme, opportunities for vaccination, emerged as a result of interaction with our CAB while collecting project data after the vaccines were available which provided additional insights about potential opportunities that would promote the uptake of COVID-19 vaccination among older Black/African Americans. The results also include application of the themes to a multi-layer framework for understanding precarity and the development of an Integrated Logic Model for a Public Health Crisis. Conclusions: These findings suggest that trust and culturally relevant information need to be addressed immediately to accelerate vaccine uptake among older Black/African Americans. New initiatives are needed to foster trust and address systemic abandonment from all institutions. In addition, culturally relevant public health campaigns about vaccine uptake are needed. Thus, systemic issues need immediate attention to reduce health disparities associated with COVID-19.

3.
J Gerontol Soc Work ; 66(1): 3-28, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35695062

ABSTRACT

Place and health are intricately bound. COVID has amplified system burdens and health risks within the housing care continuum, in which older adults with chronic illnesses are disproportionately represented. The paper identifies the health experiences of older adults with severe conditions living in and moving through temporary avoidance hotels during the COVID-19 pandemic. An interpretive descriptive approach was taken with qualitative chart data and provider observation to represent the experiences of 14 older avoidance hotel residents living with serious illnesses. Through provider documentation, we illustrate trends pre-pandemic, in the first nine months of the pandemic, and the second nine months. Such trends include strengths and opportunities such as the health-affirming nature of avoidance hotels, their potential in generating continuity of care and permanent housing, and synergy between harm reduction approaches and palliative care. Challenges were also identified in catering to the diverse medical, behavioral, and psychosocial-spiritual needs of older and seriously ill residents and the consequences of geographic dispersion on health care, health behaviors, and informal care networks. Through these strengths and challenges, avoidance hotels present essential lessons in considering future housing and healthcare intervention and implementation that addresses the needs of older seriously ill people facing homelessness and housing precarity.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Housing , Humans , Aged , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Delivery of Health Care
4.
J Urban Health ; 98(Suppl 2): 91-102, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34518983

ABSTRACT

This manuscript describes a telephone outreach project for members of a research registry program for older adults in Detroit, Michigan. From April until December 2020, the Healthier Black Elders Center designed and implemented a telephone outreach program, calling 1204 older adults utilizing 15 staff and volunteers. The calls served to check in on registry members and collect data on mental health, coping mechanisms, access to services, masks, testing, and tele-health. This paper details the methods of developing and implementing an innovative engagement program that collected time-sensitive data from older Black adults that has directly been applied to create virtual health education programs, share resource information, and create a program to reduce social isolation.


Subject(s)
Empathy , Pandemics , Aged , Humans , Social Isolation , Telephone , Volunteers
5.
Ageing Int ; 45(1): 30-49, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32742046

ABSTRACT

This study focuses on patterns and influences of return migration behavior in mainland China, (n = 468 individuals ages 50 and above) from a life-course perspective, using the 2011 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). Utilizing spatial analysis, we found return migration geographic patterns mainly from the frontier and urban centers to central provinces, involving migrant workers returning to their rural homes. We used logistic linear modeling to examine the correlations between personal attributes (e.g., age, gender, marital status), environmental aspects (e.g., community characteristics, housing conditions, geographic attributes), and return migration. Historical and socioeconomic factors affected return migration, including availability parents to provide care, declining personal health, improved housing infrastructures, and better access to community services. Our findings also show the productive social role of caregiving as a reason for migration, calling for flexible policies in China's social welfare system, comprehensive senior living facilities, and adequate support systems in rural communities.

8.
Qual Soc Work ; 18(1): 81-97, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30906228

ABSTRACT

While secondary data analysis of quantitative data has become commonplace and encouraged across disciplines, the practice of secondary data analysis with qualitative data has met more criticism and concerns regarding potential methodological and ethical problems. Though commentary about qualitative secondary data analysis has increased, little is known about the current state of qualitative secondary data analysis or how researchers are conducting secondary data analysis with qualitative data. This critical interpretive synthesis examined research articles (n = 71) published between 2006 and 2016 that involved qualitative secondary data analysis and assessed the context, purpose, and methodologies that were reported. Implications of findings are discussed, with particular focus on recommended guidelines and best practices of conducting qualitative secondary data analysis.

9.
Res Aging ; 41(1): 31-53, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29742961

ABSTRACT

This study aims to further our understanding of formal volunteering as a protective mechanism for health in the context of housing relocation and to explore race, gender, and education as moderators. A quasi-experimental design evaluated the effects of volunteering on older adults' health (self-report health, number of instrumental activities of daily living [IADLs], and depressive symptoms) among individuals who relocated but did not volunteer at Time 1 ( N = 682) in the Health and Retirement Study (2008-2010). Propensity score weighting examined health differences at Time 2 between 166 volunteers (treated) and 516 nonvolunteers (controlled). Interaction terms tested moderation. Individuals who moved and engaged in volunteering reported higher levels of self-rated health and fewer IADL difficulties compared to the control group. Race moderated the relationship between volunteering and depressive symptoms, while gender moderated the relationship between volunteering and self-assessed health. Formal volunteering protects different dimensions of health after relocation. Volunteering was particularly beneficial for females and older Whites.


Subject(s)
Health Status , Volunteers , Activities of Daily Living , Aged , Black People , Diagnostic Self Evaluation , Female , Humans , Life Change Events , Male , Population Dynamics , Propensity Score , Protective Factors , Sex Factors , White People
10.
Res Aging ; 40(6): 535-557, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28677419

ABSTRACT

This article offers an examination of aging processes of lifelong caregivers and the possibilities for social exclusion place experienced by parents of adult children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study of parental caregivers ( n = 51) sheds light on how enduring caregiving roles can lead to social exclusion in three ways: misunderstanding of ASD and stigma, the complexity of the caregiving roles, and impact on daily routines including challenges with long-term planning for both the adult children and the parental caregivers. Implications for practice to address social exclusion include education and building greater communication ties among family member for family members and advocacy for more and higher quality services including respite care. This article concludes with discussion of the impact of this aging, yet caregiving population and the need for knowledge about aging processes and anticipating aging for these caregivers.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder , Caregivers , Independent Living , Parents , Social Isolation , Adult , Adult Children , Female , Humans , Male , Prejudice , Social Stigma
11.
J Hum Behav Soc Environ ; 27(6): 515-529, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29657516

ABSTRACT

Within the landscape of postwar era Detroit, space is vast, but places are hard to find. As people tumble down the side of Maslow's pyramid into abject homelessness, they attempt to anchor themselves in locations that suspend the otherwise situational free fall. This article analyzes how time and space are perceived by people experiencing chronic homelessness and how those individual perceptions are informed by the objective time and space urban environment. We conducted our community-based participatory research into the experiences of chronic homelessness both from perspectives of chronically homeless older adult men and from front-line service providers. Themes that emerged are as follows: (1) temporary permanence, (2) permanent temporariness, and (3) lostness. The article concludes with policy implications regarding the procedures for measuring the extent of homelessness and the needs of those who live it.

13.
J Hum Behav Soc Environ ; 27(7): 656-668, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30686912

ABSTRACT

Offering an understanding of specialized service needs of those becoming homeless because of the death of a parent or parental figure, this project is set in Detroit's urban context, where residents face economic hardship and intergenerational poverty. In this study, we analyze the voices of practitioners (n = 5) and men (n = 5) who have experienced parental death as a contributing factor to homelessness in Detroit, Michigan. Findings include the following: (1) the impact of death and dying experiences on these men and (2) the role of care networks in these men's lives, particularly when these men have and lack "default" caregivers after death of a parent. This community-based research project was a result of a partnership between a local agency serving persons experiencing homelessness, where the practitioner initiated the project with the researcher. The paper concludes with implications for social work practice.

16.
Health Soc Work ; 40(3): 201-8, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26285359

ABSTRACT

This article describes the role of social workers in addressing the needs of people with heart failure. Although previous studies have explored the role of social workers in health care settings, few studies have addressed the challenges of specific chronic diseases such as heart failure. To address this gap in the literature, this study used qualitative interviews with health care social workers (n = 8) to obtain in-depth information about activities and challenges related to heart failure care. Findings suggest that health care social workers perceive heart failure as characterized by an uncertain illness trajectory, frequent hospitalizations, and difficulties accessing formal and informal care. These findings suggest the importance of what we term illness-informed social work, a practice that combines heart failure knowledge with social work competencies to address the complex psychosocial issues in heart failure care.


Subject(s)
Health Services Needs and Demand , Heart Failure/psychology , Heart Failure/therapy , Professional Role , Social Work , Chronic Disease , Female , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Terminal Care
17.
J Gerontol Soc Work ; 58(5): 521-38, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26016530

ABSTRACT

Some older adults are more vulnerable to housing concerns due to physical and cognitive challenges, including those with a neurocognitive disorder who need extensive support. Environmental gerontology frameworks, including Wiseman's 1980 Behavioral Model of Elderly Migration, have informed scholarship on aging in place and relocation. Understanding Wiseman's model, including considerations for working with families confronting a neurocognitive disorder, can help practitioners ensure that older clients live in settings that best meet their wants and needs.


Subject(s)
Independent Living , Neurocognitive Disorders , Patient Transfer/methods , Residential Facilities/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Behavioral Research , Geriatric Psychiatry/methods , Humans , Independent Living/psychology , Independent Living/statistics & numerical data , Needs Assessment , Neurocognitive Disorders/psychology , Neurocognitive Disorders/therapy
18.
Res Aging ; 37(3): 253-74, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25651571

ABSTRACT

According to Erik Erikson's theory on the stages of human development, achieving wisdom later in life involves revisiting previous crises and renewing psychosocial accomplishments. However, few studies have used Erikson's theory as a framework for examining how older adults self-manage physical and mental health changes that commonly occur later in life. This article presents findings from two qualitative studies that demonstrate how older adults apply wisdom in new domains. Specifically, it was found that older adults (1) reasserted autonomy by initiating creative problem solving and (2) applied skills gained from productive activities earlier in life to new health-related problems that arise later in life. These findings highlight the importance of engaging older adults to repurpose their life skills and thus reapply wisdom to new areas of their lives. Implications for practice are discussed.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Attitude to Health , Psychological Theory , Self Care/psychology , Self Concept , Adaptation, Psychological , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Choice Behavior , Human Development , Humans , Personal Satisfaction , Social Support
19.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci ; 70(3): 453-61, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24870030

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The process of moving in older adulthood, intertwined with loss and anticipation, is grounded in material commodities that include one's residence and its contents. This article emphasizes the role of material culture in housing transitions. METHODS: Based on an ethnographic study (January 2009-May 2012) of older Americans (n = 81) relocating, this study utilized interviews, participant observation, and review of documents. RESULTS: Personalization is both a reflection of a previous self as a homeowner and a projection of a future self as extensions of temporality intertwine with commodification processes. Through creative appropriations of their housing, residences are personalized to promote physical or social functionality or because of preference. DISCUSSION: Given the findings, the transitions involved in relocation must be supported by greater understanding and facilitation of key issues of personalization and its importance to older adults' decisions to relocate.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Environment , Housing for the Elderly , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Midwestern United States/ethnology , Qualitative Research
20.
Signs Soc (Chic) ; 2(1): 28-55, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25506598

ABSTRACT

Concerns of appropriate housing may arise in older adulthood. Some older adults may make life work in the place we call home; others take steps to voluntarily relocate in anticipation of health and other needs. While moving at any age can be challenging, moving from one's home in later life also represents multiple reflections: past, present and future selves, control of one's space and relinquishing the care of one's space to another person or corporation, family support and family fissures, and the body's capacities and limitations. Moving is examined as a moment where regimes of value are negotiated through competing semiotic ideologies and at times social roles are transformed. Ethnographic fieldwork occurred from January 2009-May 2012 in the Midwest United States. This paper presents experiences of relocation of material and social role transformation as older adults make this housing, and writ large, life transition.

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