The intersection of race and financial strain: The pain of social disconnection among women in the United States.

IF 1.7 4区 社会学 Q3 GERONTOLOGY Journal of Women & Aging Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1080/08952841.2022.2041154
Tirth R Bhatta, Nirmala Lekhak, Timothy D Goler, Eva Kahana, Sfurti Rathi
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Objectives: Considerable attention has been directed at increased social isolation and loneliness during the COVID-19 pandemic and their impact on later-life psychological well-being. There is a dearth of research on the effect of financial strain and associated psychosocial mechanisms on loneliness among women across racial groups. It is unclear how racial status and financial strain intersect to impact later-life loneliness amid immense uncertainty, social isolation, and anxiety induced by the pandemic.Methods: Based on our nationwide Web-based survey (n = 1,301), we used ordinary least square regression to examine the effects of financial strain on loneliness among Black and White women and assessed the role of emotional support in contributing to such effects.Results: We found that Black women face significantly more financial strain than White women but also receive more emotional support and experience less loneliness. Findings show that women experiencing financial strain report increased loneliness, but the negative effects of financial strain are significantly greater for Black women than for White women. Our mediation analysis revealed that emotional support made a significant contribution to the effects of financial strain on loneliness in White women but not in Black women.Discussion: Despite shared vulnerability and social isolation across the general population, our findings suggest that negative effects of financial strain on loneliness among women continue to differ across race, even amid the pandemic. Our findings demonstrate how emotional support explains the relationship between financial strain and later-life loneliness in a racially distinct manner.

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种族与经济压力的交集:美国女性社会脱节的痛苦。
目标:在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,社会隔离和孤独感的增加及其对晚年心理健康的影响引起了相当大的关注。关于经济压力和相关的社会心理机制对各种族妇女孤独感的影响的研究很少。目前尚不清楚种族地位和经济压力如何相互影响,在巨大的不确定性、社会孤立和大流行引起的焦虑中影响晚年的孤独感。方法:基于我们的全国性网络调查(n = 1,301),我们使用普通最小二乘回归来检验经济压力对黑人和白人女性孤独感的影响,并评估情感支持在这种影响中的作用。结果:我们发现黑人女性比白人女性面临更大的经济压力,但也得到更多的情感支持和更少的孤独感。研究结果显示,经历经济压力的女性报告孤独感增加,但经济压力的负面影响对黑人女性的影响明显大于白人女性。我们的中介分析显示,情感支持对白人女性经济压力对孤独感的影响有显著的贡献,而对黑人女性则没有。讨论:尽管一般人群都有共同的脆弱性和社会孤立,但我们的研究结果表明,即使在大流行期间,经济压力对女性孤独感的负面影响仍然因种族而异。我们的研究结果表明,情感支持如何以一种不同种族的方式解释经济压力和晚年孤独之间的关系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
29
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