Giannouli Vaitsa, Hall Latoya, Lichtenberg Peter A
School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
School of Social Sciences, Hellenic Open University, Greece.
J Appl Gerontol. 2025 Jun 11:7334648251347998. doi: 10.1177/07334648251347998.
Population-based self-report studies find older Blacks are at increased risk of financial exploitation victimization. We compared several psychological, cognitive, social, and physical health measures between Black women who were confirmed victims of financial exploitation (SAFE participants) and a group of older Black women in the same community with no reported history of exploitation. SAFE participants were significantly older, less educated, and in poorer health than the community comparison participants. They also reported less social support, more depressive and anxiety symptoms, and a higher financial exploitation vulnerability than did the community comparison participants. In a logistic regression analysis, results indicated that only age, education, and financial exploitation vulnerability were associated with the participation of individuals in the SAFE financial exploitation group. The results underscore the multiple ways in which older Black women victims of financial exploitation are vulnerable compared to their community peers who were not exploited.
基于人群的自我报告研究发现,老年黑人遭受金融剥削的风险更高。我们比较了被确认为金融剥削受害者的黑人女性(SAFE参与者)与同一社区中没有剥削报告历史的老年黑人女性群体之间的几种心理、认知、社会和身体健康指标。SAFE参与者比社区对照参与者年龄显著更大、受教育程度更低且健康状况更差。她们还报告称社会支持更少、抑郁和焦虑症状更多,并且比社区对照参与者有更高的金融剥削易感性。在逻辑回归分析中,结果表明只有年龄、教育程度和金融剥削易感性与个体参与SAFE金融剥削组有关。结果强调了与未遭受剥削的社区同龄人相比,遭受金融剥削的老年黑人女性受害者在多个方面更易受到伤害。