PERCEPTIONS OF ELDER ABUSE AND NEGLECT AND HELP-SEEKING PATTERNS AMONG FILIPINO AND KOREAN ELDERLY WOMEN IN HONOLULU

Authors
Citation
S. Pablo et Kl. Braun, PERCEPTIONS OF ELDER ABUSE AND NEGLECT AND HELP-SEEKING PATTERNS AMONG FILIPINO AND KOREAN ELDERLY WOMEN IN HONOLULU, Journal of elder abuse & neglect, 9(2), 1997, pp. 63-76
Citations number
19
ISSN journal
08946566
Volume
9
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
63 - 76
Database
ISI
SICI code
0894-6566(1997)9:2<63:POEAAN>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The design of culturally-sensitive programs related to elder abuse and neglect requires information on how minorities perceive abuse and neg lect and when, and from whom, they would seek help. Unfortunately, res earch on Asian-American perceptions of and help-seeking for elder abus e is limited. An exception is the research by Moon and Williams (1993) who studied several ethnic groups in Minnesota and found that Korean- Americans were less likely than Caucasian and African-Americans to lab el a scenario as abusive or to seek help, especially from formal sourc es. The current study used the same methodology to begin exploring how Asian-American groups in Honolulu perceived abuse/neglect and sought help. Unexpectedly, the Filipino and Korean respondents in Honolulu ga ve responses that were more similar to the responses of Caucasians in Minnesota than to the Korean group in Minnesota. Possible reasons are that Asian-American minorities in Honolulu had better access to cultur ally-appropriate services than minorities do in mid-western U.S. commu nities and that members of the Korean and Filipino samples in Honolulu were more acculturated than the Korean sample in Minnesota.