Madnawat A V Singh, Kachhawa P Singh
Department of Psychology, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India.
Death Stud. 2007 Sep;31(8):763-9. doi: 10.1080/07481180701490743.
The present study examines the effect of age, gender, and living circumstances on elderly persons' death anxiety. For this purpose, 299 persons attending public parks (average age = 70 years) were interviewed using the Death Anxiety Survey Schedule, which is a set of 10 questions related to death anxiety from an Indian perspective. Women, those relatively older, and those living with family were significantly more anxious about the word death. The gender and age results in this Indian sample are similar to that in some western samples. The results that those living with family have significantly higher death anxiety are not in agreement with past western studies and may reflect cultural differences in anxiety about death.
本研究考察了年龄、性别和生活环境对老年人死亡焦虑的影响。为此,我们使用《死亡焦虑调查问卷》对299名在公园游玩的人(平均年龄 = 70岁)进行了访谈,该问卷包含10个从印度视角出发、与死亡焦虑相关的问题。女性、年龄相对较大者以及与家人同住者对“死亡”一词的焦虑程度明显更高。在这个印度样本中,性别和年龄的结果与一些西方样本相似。与家人同住者死亡焦虑程度显著更高这一结果与过去西方的研究不一致,可能反映了在死亡焦虑方面的文化差异。