Family relations and health health over the life course a Lebanese perspective
The link between family relations and wellbeing in old age has received ample attention in the international literature, but remains least examined in the Arab region where cultural ideals assume positive intergenerational relations within families as the norm. In this paper, we employ survey data c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Maġallat al-ṭibbiyat al-lubnāniyyat 2015, Vol.63 (1), p.8-14 |
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Sprache: | eng ; fre |
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Zusammenfassung: | The link between family relations and wellbeing
in old age has received ample attention in the international
literature, but remains least examined in the Arab
region where cultural ideals assume positive intergenerational
relations within families as the norm. In this paper, we
employ survey data collected in Greater Beirut in 2009 to
explore associations between family relations and health
over the life course. We tested 1) the extent to which age and
social relation characteristics predict health ; and 2) whether
the association between age and health is stronger for those
who report smaller social networks and poorer relationship
quality. We employed self-rated health and self-reported
chronic illness as the health outcome measures and social
network size, positive quality and negative quality with family
members as the social relations measures. Our findings
suggest that social relations are differentially important depending
on the health status indicator examined. The single
dimension that influenced both self-rated health and the
probability of reporting a chronic illness was positive relationship
quality with spouse. Further, social relations, particularly
having a negative relationship quality with spouse and
adult child, exert stronger effects on both self-rated health
and chronic illness for older compared to younger adults. The
findings of the present study are important for clinical practitioners
who often consider the role and importance of available
social resources as they address the health needs of
older adults |
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ISSN: | 0023-9852 |