New study explains why some people are less concerned about age, showing that education, income and fare social policies could facilitate the fears of China’s aging.
Study: Why does the anxiety of aging emerge? A study on the impact of socio -economic status. Credit Picture: Toa55/Shutterstock.com
A recent study at Borders in psychology It explores the mechanisms through which the socio -economic status (SES) affects the anxiety of aging, using data from Chinese general social research (CGSS).
How has the transformation in the economy and society affect the anxiety related to aging?
The challenge associated with the aging of the population is becoming more and more serious in China, with 15.4% of the total population over 65 in late 2023. At social level, progress for healthy aging is obstructed by stereotypes and constant discrimination against the elderly.
Existing research has shown the adverse mental impacts and prosperity associated with negative views or beliefs about aging. The fear of elderly loneliness and diseases associated with aging can contribute to the anxiety and depression of death. Stress can spread and turn into a diffuse social mood if left untreated. This, in turn, could adversely affect socio -economic development and healthy aging.
Anxiety aging is worth exploring the factors that affect a wider social structural level. Such explorations are missing in existing research, which requires further examination of causal mechanisms between aging anxiety and factors that affect, such as SES.
For the study
This study uses data from Chinese general social research (CGSS) 2021 to analyze the mechanisms through which the socio -economic state affects the aging of stress. It also illuminates the impact of structural social factors, such as trafficking levels and urban differences in the anxiety of aging. Socio -economic factors include personal income, subjective expectations for increasing socio -economic status and levels of education. In addition, factors such as political participation, social trust and social support have been examined as checks. Perceptions of aging and stressors were used as mediating variables.
Since other factors may affect the impact of the socio -economic situation on anxiety, this analysis has used hierarchical linear modeling (HLM).
Variables at the province level were modeling to assess the temperature role of trafficking and the immediate impact of socio -economic status (SES) on anxiety.
Due to the complex relationship between the anxiety of aging and the objective/subjective SES, structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to analyze mediation mechanisms. For analysis of heterogeneity, the Probit hierarchical order (oprobit) evaluated the effects of SES on each particular stress dimension.
Study findings
The overall average stress rating of aging was marginally reduced between 2010 and 2021. On individual anxiety dimensions, the average concern for self-care (natural mobility) has decreased marginally, anxiety about autonomy (decision-making) increased slightly and the stress for self-sufficiency increased. This emphasizes the impact caused by the stress of improved levels of income and socio -economic development.
Several reflux models were appreciated to evaluate the impact of SES on anxiety. The fully saturated model has shown that the socio -economic situation, the factors of anxiety and the perceptions of aging have significant effects on the aging of anxiety. Specifically, improvements in education and income and favorable expectations of socio -economic situation significantly relieve the anxiety of aging.
The impact of nationality, family status and political affiliation were only important on simpler models, but they lost importance as soon as all the variables were included. Social confidence and participation in social security were also protective, and the impact of social support were more complex. They were sometimes associated with higher stress when the cargo loads of care meant that “listening” support from relatives added anxiety instead of relaxing it. Age showed a U -shaped correlation with the turning point in about 42 years.
SEM mediation analysis has shown that education is partly affecting the aging of stress through personal stressors, barriers to health care access, family stressors and aging perceptions. Personal income has shown a petty effect on family stressors, while maintaining significant negative effects on personal stress factors. It also showed significant positive impact on the perceptions of aging.
Overall, income affects the aging of stress indirectly through the perceptions of aging and personal stressors. In addition, expectations of subjective mobility affect the stress of aging both through personal and expected stress channels. The authors also noted that part of the impact of education (~ 13%) and income (~ 7%) on anxiety is indirectly operated through the expectations of social mobility.
An insignificant correlation was observed by examining whether provincial trafficking levels mitigate the relationship between personal incomes, subjective SES and aging of stress. However, there was a significant positive moderation with regional commercialization of the mitigating effect of the educational level on anxiety. This means that education has reduced the stress of aging more strongly in the provinces with higher levels of marketing, while the income and subjective expectations SES did not show significant moderation.
Regarding heterogeneity analysis, levels of regional urbanization and urban -agrarian structures reduced the effects of SES on anxiety. In more urban areas, reducing the stress of the educational level is stronger. Among the inhabitants of the countryside, increased participation in social security can relieve stress.
Conclusions
The first concern is the hierarchy of the fair distribution of development benefits to all residents in rural and urban areas. Secondly, online and off -connection platforms must be used to build a society that appreciates its elderly population. Extensive public awareness campaigns could help fight age -based discrimination and negative stereotypes.
Institutional arrangements for social security systems should be strengthened, especially those related to long -term care. The hierarchy of the vulnerable low -income groups and the rural residents could mitigate the worries associated with aging.
