General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness

As individuals age, they witness a decline in physical health and functional capacities. The presence of one or more chronic illnesses challenges their quality of life and general well-being, thus, impacting their abilities to function physically, psychologically, and socially. We investigated repor...

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Main Authors: Darlingtina Esiaka MS, Pegah Naemi MA, Araba Kuofie MA, Riley Hess BA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-06-01
Series:Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721419855664
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spelling doaj-65e5882dcd514acc907de7ea2ed334d12020-11-25T03:24:44ZengSAGE PublishingGerontology and Geriatric Medicine2333-72142019-06-01510.1177/2333721419855664General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic IllnessDarlingtina Esiaka MS0Pegah Naemi MA1Araba Kuofie MA2Riley Hess BA3University of Kansas, Lawrence, USAUniversity of Kansas, Lawrence, USAUniversity of Kansas, Lawrence, USAUniveristy of Georgia, Athens, USAAs individuals age, they witness a decline in physical health and functional capacities. The presence of one or more chronic illnesses challenges their quality of life and general well-being, thus, impacting their abilities to function physically, psychologically, and socially. We investigated reports of general well-being in older Black males with chronic illness(es) in a study of N = 145 participants, aged 35 to 63, and identified as Black/African American male. Participants responded to items assessing general well-being; ethnic identity; self-esteem; active coping; the presence of chronic illness(es); and additional demographic, social and ecological characteristics. Analyses of responses indicated that marital status (β = –.17, p < .05), ethnic identity (β = –.34, p = .00), self-esteem (β = .22, p = .03) are significant determinants of general well-being in Black males with chronic illness(es). Data further showed active coping ( β = –.41 p = .09) to be negatively correlated with well-being. We discuss the implications of results for the understanding of health outcomes among this marginalized population.https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721419855664
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Darlingtina Esiaka MS
Pegah Naemi MA
Araba Kuofie MA
Riley Hess BA
spellingShingle Darlingtina Esiaka MS
Pegah Naemi MA
Araba Kuofie MA
Riley Hess BA
General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
author_facet Darlingtina Esiaka MS
Pegah Naemi MA
Araba Kuofie MA
Riley Hess BA
author_sort Darlingtina Esiaka MS
title General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
title_short General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
title_full General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
title_fullStr General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
title_full_unstemmed General Well-Being in Adult Black Males With Chronic Illness
title_sort general well-being in adult black males with chronic illness
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
issn 2333-7214
publishDate 2019-06-01
description As individuals age, they witness a decline in physical health and functional capacities. The presence of one or more chronic illnesses challenges their quality of life and general well-being, thus, impacting their abilities to function physically, psychologically, and socially. We investigated reports of general well-being in older Black males with chronic illness(es) in a study of N = 145 participants, aged 35 to 63, and identified as Black/African American male. Participants responded to items assessing general well-being; ethnic identity; self-esteem; active coping; the presence of chronic illness(es); and additional demographic, social and ecological characteristics. Analyses of responses indicated that marital status (β = –.17, p < .05), ethnic identity (β = –.34, p = .00), self-esteem (β = .22, p = .03) are significant determinants of general well-being in Black males with chronic illness(es). Data further showed active coping ( β = –.41 p = .09) to be negatively correlated with well-being. We discuss the implications of results for the understanding of health outcomes among this marginalized population.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721419855664
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