The authors examined changing attitudes about filial piety, or xiao, using data from intensive interviews with 20 elderly residents, 14 family members, and 9 staff members in Nanjing, China. The findings reveal that respondents interpreted the notion of xiao in terms of their own social worlds and on the basis of their own social locations and contexts. The increasing unavailabil-ity of adult children, various benefits of institutional care, and children’s financial assistance for older parents are major explanations for xiao behav-iors, even when elders are placed in institutions. The high cost of professional care in institutions is contributing to a shift in attitudes about institutional elder care from stigma to privilege. The authors a...
Using data from Determinants of Healthy Longevity in China (DHLC) 1998-2002, this study examines thr...
This article explores the links between old age support and the characteristics of both parents and ...
A rapidly growing aging population, the one-child policy, and the Economic Reform in urban China pos...
China has the largest net aging population in the world along with a rapid aging pace. Historically,...
In China, the need to care for the elderly population is increasing dramatically. China’s baby boome...
The world has witnessed a rapidly aging China and as a result of the social changes, numerous elderl...
With the life expectancy being steadily increasing, caring for an ageing population presents a param...
Project (M.S.W., Social Work) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.The rapid growth of o...
Social support networks, consisting principally of family members, neighbors, and friends, can provi...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
Drawing on the 2002 wave of the Chinese Survey of Family Dynamics and the 2002 wave of the Chinese L...
This article explores the intertwining issues of filial obligation, material interest and emotional ...
In early Confucian texts, co-residence with one's parents was paramount in practicing filial piety a...
Abstract Background The Chinese tradition of filial piety, which prioritized family-based care for t...
Meinhof M, Zhang Y. The Extension of Xiao. In: He L, Gangopadhyay J, eds. Elderly Care Issues in Chi...
Using data from Determinants of Healthy Longevity in China (DHLC) 1998-2002, this study examines thr...
This article explores the links between old age support and the characteristics of both parents and ...
A rapidly growing aging population, the one-child policy, and the Economic Reform in urban China pos...
China has the largest net aging population in the world along with a rapid aging pace. Historically,...
In China, the need to care for the elderly population is increasing dramatically. China’s baby boome...
The world has witnessed a rapidly aging China and as a result of the social changes, numerous elderl...
With the life expectancy being steadily increasing, caring for an ageing population presents a param...
Project (M.S.W., Social Work) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.The rapid growth of o...
Social support networks, consisting principally of family members, neighbors, and friends, can provi...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
Drawing on the 2002 wave of the Chinese Survey of Family Dynamics and the 2002 wave of the Chinese L...
This article explores the intertwining issues of filial obligation, material interest and emotional ...
In early Confucian texts, co-residence with one's parents was paramount in practicing filial piety a...
Abstract Background The Chinese tradition of filial piety, which prioritized family-based care for t...
Meinhof M, Zhang Y. The Extension of Xiao. In: He L, Gangopadhyay J, eds. Elderly Care Issues in Chi...
Using data from Determinants of Healthy Longevity in China (DHLC) 1998-2002, this study examines thr...
This article explores the links between old age support and the characteristics of both parents and ...
A rapidly growing aging population, the one-child policy, and the Economic Reform in urban China pos...