Johnson C L
University of California, San Francisco, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 1999 Nov;54(6):S368-75. doi: 10.1093/geronb/54b.6.s368.
The purpose here is to identify those processes that account for the more active and supportive kinship networks among Black oldest old than found among their White age peers.
Focused interviews were conducted with 122 Blacks 85 years and older. Both open-ended and semistructured questions were asked in order to determine how Blacks defined family and kinship membership, their expectations for kin, and the desired levels of reciprocity.
A content analysis of the responses indicated that Blacks defined the boundaries of their families flexibly so as to include fictive kin, and they upgraded more distant kin into the status of primary kin. They also emphasized the importance of collateral relatives so as to expand the size of the network.
These processes use personal choices as well as immediate needs to expand the basis of relatedness beyond blood and marriage. Thus the supportive capacities of networks increase in order to serve a potentially vulnerable population.
本文旨在确定那些导致黑人高龄老人比同龄白人拥有更活跃、更具支持性的亲属网络的因素。
对122名85岁及以上的黑人进行了聚焦访谈。提出了开放式和半结构化问题,以确定黑人如何定义家庭和亲属关系、他们对亲属的期望以及期望的互惠程度。
对回答的内容分析表明,黑人灵活地界定其家庭边界,将拟亲属纳入其中,并将关系较远的亲属提升为主要亲属的地位。他们还强调旁系亲属的重要性,以扩大亲属网络的规模。
这些因素利用个人选择以及当下需求,将亲属关系的基础扩展到血缘和婚姻之外。因此,亲属网络的支持能力得以增强,以服务于潜在的弱势群体。