York Cornwell Erin
Department of Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Res Aging. 2014 Jul;36(4):399-430. doi: 10.1177/0164027513497369. Epub 2013 Sep 8.
For older adults aging in the community, living conditions can promote health, enhance coping, and reduce disablement--but they can also create stress and increase risks of illness, accidents, and decline. Although socioeconomic disparities in housing likely contribute to inequalities in interior conditions, I argue that living conditions are also shaped by social resources such as coresidential relationships, social network ties, and social support. In this article, I examine the distribution of a set of risky or stressful physical and ambient living conditions including structural disrepair, clutter, lack of cleanliness, noise, and odor. Using data from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP), I find that low-income and African American older adults have more disordered living conditions as do those with poorer physical and mental health. In addition, older adults who have a coresident partner, more nonresidential network ties, and more sources of instrumental support are exposed to fewer risky or harmful living conditions. This suggests that living conditions are an important, though overlooked, mechanism through which household composition, social networks, and social support affect health and well-being in later life.
对于在社区中变老的老年人来说,生活条件可以促进健康、增强应对能力并减少残疾——但它们也可能造成压力,增加患病、发生事故和身体衰退的风险。尽管住房方面的社会经济差异可能导致居住环境条件的不平等,但我认为生活条件也受到诸如共同居住关系、社会网络联系和社会支持等社会资源的影响。在本文中,我研究了一系列有风险或有压力的物质和环境生活条件的分布情况,包括结构失修、杂乱、不清洁、噪音和异味。利用来自全国社会生活、健康与老龄化项目(NSHAP)的数据,我发现低收入和非裔美国老年人的生活条件比那些身心健康状况较差的人更无序。此外,有共同居住伴侣、更多非居住网络联系以及更多工具性支持来源的老年人面临的有风险或有害的生活条件更少。这表明生活条件是家庭构成、社会网络和社会支持影响晚年健康和幸福的一个重要但被忽视的机制。