Korean J Hosp Palliat Care.  2019 Mar;22(1):30-38. 10.0000/kjhpc.2019.22.1.30.

Factors Influencing Death Anxiety in Community-Dwelling Elderly: Based on the Ecology Theory

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Nursing, Busan Women's University, Busan, Korea.
  • 2Department of Nursing, Dong-A University, Busan, Korea. mjkim@dau.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
This study analyzed a path through which factors influencing death anxiety in the community-dwelling elderly, assuming personal organismic factors and microsystemic factors based on the ecology model purported by Belsky (1980).
METHODS
This study was performed with 189 elderly people. Data were collected through a self-report questionnaire. The data were analyzed using the SPSS and AMOS programs.
RESULTS
The factors influencing death anxiety in the elderly were depression, family support, social network, and familism value, and the explanatory power of these variables was 22%. Death anxiety increased with higher depression, higher familism value, larger social network, and lower family support. Spiritual well-being and elderly discrimination experience had indirect effects on death anxiety, and these effects were mediated by depression.
CONCLUSION
Depression, family support, social network, and familism value were found to influence death anxiety in the elderly, and the strongest effect came from depression. To reduce death anxiety in the elderly, it is important to improve their relationship with their family and friends. Moreover, support should be provided by establishing local systems, and intervention should be provided to alleviate depression.

Keyword

Death; Anxiety; Aged

MeSH Terms

Aged*
Anxiety*
Depression
Discrimination (Psychology)
Ecology*
Friends
Humans
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