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      A Companion to Diaspora and Transnationalism 

      Gender and Identity in Oral Histories of Elderly Russian Jewish Migrants in the United States and Canada

      edited_book
      Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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          Depression and demoralization among Russian-Jewish immigrants in primary care.

          The purpose of this study was to examine the levels and nature of psychological distress and depression among Russian-Jewish émigrés in primary care. Fifty-seven consecutive patients at the primary care clinic were assessed with the Hamilton Depression Scale (Ham-D). The subjects completed self-rating scales, including the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Life Orientation Test, Beck Hopelessness Scale, Attributional Style Questionnaire, and Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale. Data on demographics and physical complaints were collected and analyzed. Of the patients studied, 82.5% experienced psychological distress (BDI > or = 10), and 43.9% had clinically significant depressive symptoms (Ham-D > or = 17). BDI and Ham-D scores were significantly correlated with the number of psychosomatic complaints, hopelessness, lack of optimism, anhedonia, and dysfunctional attributional style. The distressed, but not depressed, patients had preservation of hedonic capacity. The authors found a high rate of depression based upon Ham-D scores among the Russian-Jewish émigrés in primary care. The authors suggest that this high rate is attributable to a culturally specific tendency to express distress in somatic terms. The nature of distress was phenomenologically similar to demoralization.
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            Health and Social Service Utilization Among Elderly Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union

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              Late-Life Migration, Work Status, and Survival: The Case of Older Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel

              This analysis examined mortality among late-life Soviet Jewish immigrants in Israel, and the contribution of post-migration work status to their survival. The study linked 1997 survey data to mortality records, seven years hence. The results revealed that mortality was associated with older age, male gender, morbidity, and having less resourceful social networks. More importantly, after controlling for these background variables work status remained a significant correlate. Late-life immigrants who had never worked in the host country had a significantly greater risk of death than their immigrant counterparts who had ever worked (or were still working).
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                Book Chapter
                June 25 2013
                : 277-292
                10.1002/9781118320792.ch16
                767f0937-82a2-4b8a-a320-6fd1e0a97054
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