Department of Gerontology, McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA.
Gerontologist. 2021 Feb 23;61(2):262-272. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnaa217.
Framed within Conservation of Resources theory, this study addressed race-ethnic differences in the relationships between emotional distress and current and expected coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic stressors.
The study employed data from the Household Pulse Survey, a large national survey collecting weekly data to understand the experiences of Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic (age 55 and above; N = 94,550). Emotional distress included depression and anxiety symptoms. COVID-19 stressors included current and expected income, housing, health care, and food insecurities.
Older persons of color reported higher rates of stressors and emotional distress than their White counterparts. In relation to current stressors, older Black persons responded with less emotional distress and older Latino persons responded with more emotional distress than older White persons. In addition, older persons of color were more likely to expect future resource losses related to COVID-19, and the association between these expectations and emotional distress varied by race-ethnic group.
The findings reflected the disproportionate negative impact of COVID-19 stressors on emotional distress among older persons of color, providing a baseline for future studies to further examine the impacts of the pandemic among diverse older adult populations.
本研究基于资源保存理论,探讨了情绪困扰与当前和预期的 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行压力源之间的关系在种族-民族差异。
该研究采用了来自家庭脉搏调查的数据,这是一项大型全国性调查,每周收集数据以了解美国人在 COVID-19 大流行期间的经历(年龄在 55 岁及以上;N=94550)。情绪困扰包括抑郁和焦虑症状。COVID-19 压力源包括当前和预期的收入、住房、医疗保健和食品不安全。
有色人种的老年人报告的压力源和情绪困扰率高于其白人同龄人。就当前的压力源而言,黑人老年人的情绪困扰程度较低,而拉丁裔老年人的情绪困扰程度则高于白人老年人。此外,有色人种的老年人更有可能预期未来与 COVID-19 相关的资源损失,而这些预期与情绪困扰之间的关联因种族-民族群体而异。
这些发现反映了 COVID-19 压力源对有色人种老年人情绪困扰的不成比例的负面影响,为未来的研究提供了基线,以进一步研究大流行对不同老年人群体的影响。