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Journal Article

Citation

Chokkanathan S. J. Interpers. Violence 2015; 30(18): 3267-3282.

Affiliation

National University of Singapore, Singapore Srinivasan.chokkanathan@gmail.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260514555014

PMID

25381286

Abstract

There is limited information on the nature of and health factors associated with elder mistreatment in rural areas. To address this gap in the literature, the current study described the nature of such mistreatment and investigated the association between different types of mistreatment and health factors among 897 randomly selected elderly persons in rural India. The results show that elder mistreatment was widely prevalent (21%). Furthermore, the higher frequency of and simultaneous occurrence of multiple types of mistreatment (83.4%) suggest that mistreatment was a continuous stressor. The presence of overall mistreatment was positively associated with depression symptoms and subjective health status. The higher levels of chronicity and multiple mistreatments further increased depression symptoms and lowered the health status of those who were mistreated. Although women, more than men, were more likely to experience mistreatment, chronic mistreatment, and multiple mistreatments, there were no significant gender differences in the mistreatment-health relationship. These findings suggest that older adults with depression symptoms and poor health should be screened for mistreatment.


Language: en

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