Options
Proclivity to elder abuse: A community study on Hong Kong Chinese
Date Issued
2003
ISSN
0886-2605
1552-6518
Citation
Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2003, vol. 18(9), pp. 999-1017.
Type
Peer Reviewed Journal Article
Abstract
This study aimed to provide preliminary estimates on proclivity to elder abuse and to determine the efficacy of the intergenerational transmission of violence and ecological theories in predicting elder abuse in contemporary Chinese societies. A total of 464 (225 males and 239 females) Chinese residing in Hong Kong completed questionnaires on attitudes toward elderly people, modernity, and filial piety as well as childhood experiences of abuse and proclivity to elder abuse. Results indicated that proclivity to verbal elder abuse was the most common among the three depicted types of abuse, accounting for 20% of the sample, whereas proclivity to physical and social elder abuse was less common, each accounting for 2.4%. A high level of childhood experience of abuse consistently emerged as the single most salient predictor for participants' endorsement of proclivity to elder abuse, while negative attitudes toward elderly people and modernity were the second and third most salient predictors.
Loading...
Availability at HKSYU Library

