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Research on Aging
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Worry about Medical Care, Family Support, and Depression of the Elders in Urban China

Rongjun Sun

Cleveland State University, r.sun32{at}csuohio.edu

This study examines the role of family support in reducing the elders’s depression in the face of the perceived inadequate public medical care in urban China. Using data from the Survey on Aging and Intergenerational Relations in Baoding City, this article investigates the overall depression level, somatic symptoms, and affective symptoms, respectively. The findings suggest that perceived inadequate public medical care, which results from dramatic changes in China’s socioeconomic transformation, has a stressful impact on all measures of depression. Family support, by its structure and function, shows both direct and moderating effects in counteracting such stress from the public domain. In light of China’s demographic transition, the state is called upon to adopt a comprehensive strategy in designing its socioeconomic development policy to meet the needs of an aging population

Key Words: elderly • depression • medical care • family support • China

Research on Aging, Vol. 26, No. 5, 559-585 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0164027504266467


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This article has been cited by other articles:


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Journal of Family IssuesHome page
Feinian Chen and S. E. Short
Household Context and Subjective Well-Being Among the Oldest Old in China
Journal of Family Issues, October 1, 2008; 29(10): 1379 - 1403.
[Abstract] [PDF]