Intersectional Social Identity, Perceived Discrimination, and Mental Health Among Older Adults in India.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 GERONTOLOGY
Shriya Thakkar, Hyunsu Oh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Although adverse mental health outcomes linked to discrimination among older adults have been well acknowledged, our understanding of the discrimination-mental health link in non-Western paradigms is still limited. Using data from the Longitudinal Aging Study in India (LASI) with an intersectional approach, we examined how perceived discrimination was linked to the level of depressive symptoms among older adults in India and how this association was moderated by caste and gender. Our ordered logistic regression models indicated that higher levels of perceived discrimination are associated with an increased likelihood of reporting the most severe depressive symptoms among Scheduled Tribe (ST) women, as well as men and women from Other Backward Castes (OBC). In cases of less severe depression levels, the probabilities decline with increasing discrimination. Our findings contribute to a deeper understanding of how intersecting caste and gender-based disadvantages shape mental health trajectories in later life within the Indian context.

印度老年人的交叉社会认同、感知歧视与心理健康
尽管老年人中与歧视有关的不良心理健康结果已得到充分承认,但我们对非西方范式中歧视与心理健康联系的理解仍然有限。使用来自印度纵向老龄化研究(LASI)的数据,采用交叉方法,我们研究了感知歧视与印度老年人抑郁症状水平的关系,以及种姓和性别如何调节这种关系。我们的有序逻辑回归模型表明,在排定部落(ST)女性以及其他落后种姓(OBC)的男性和女性中,较高程度的感知歧视与报告最严重抑郁症状的可能性增加有关。在抑郁程度较轻的情况下,随着歧视的增加,这种可能性会下降。我们的研究结果有助于更深入地了解种姓和基于性别的劣势如何在印度背景下塑造晚年生活中的心理健康轨迹。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
5.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: These are some of the broad questions with which the International Journal of Aging and Human Development is concerned. Emphasis is upon psychological and social studies of aging and the aged. However, the Journal also publishes research that introduces observations from other fields that illuminate the "human" side of gerontology, or utilizes gerontological observations to illuminate in other fields.
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