Immigrant Older Adults’ Experiences of Aging in Place and Their Neighborhoods: A Qualitative Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Review Question
2. Methods
2.1. Inclusion Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Study Selection
2.4. Assessment of Methodological Quality
2.5. Data Extraction and Meta-Aggregation
2.6. Assessing Confidence in the Findings
3. Results
3.1. Study Inclusion
3.2. Characteristics of Included Studies
3.3. Methodological Quality
3.4. Review Findings
3.5. Synthesized Finding 1
3.5.1. Category 1.1 Physical Accessibility and Walkability
“The pavements and streets are very narrow and dangerous. People get hit by cars when they try to cross the road’ (71-year-old man)… There are no benches and there is hardly any green space around here’ (66-year-old woman).” [38]
3.5.2. Category 1.2 Winter Weather Challenges
“From our house to the bus stop, you have to walk over ice. [I] have to wear three or four layers, wear gloves. This clothing is very heavy. [You] have to exert yourself. If the ice is frozen, then you could slip and fall. If I slip and fall, I will have to suffer. I will become a headache to my children.”—Ranil [59]
3.5.3. Category 1.3 Importance of Clean and Maintained Spaces
“The roads are dirty and full of cigarette butts and cans. They throw everything on the floor. Despite cleaning our front door, they always make it filthy it again…But where can we make a complaint? The municipality never does anything…’ (64-year-old woman)” [38]
3.5.4. Category 1.4 Availability of Nearby Greenspaces
“Participant 15 (61 years old) said: “I love the beach… I am from Puerto Rico, surrounded by water… I love the water. Here I love to go to the water, the water by Downtown.” Participant 15 selected a picture of the beach in Puerto Rico (photo five)…” [45]
3.6. Synthesized Finding 2
3.6.1. Discriminatory Experience in Using Public Transportation
“…the mainstream’s view about us makes us feel even lonely. For example, they just talked about the bus. If it is a local Kiwi waiting in that place, the bus would stop. If they see a Chinese person waiting in that place, the driver would not stop the bus. Sometimes when we got on the bus, and ring the bell, they still keep driving and stop at the next bus stop. It took us a long time to walk a long way back. (Chinese man)” [53]
3.6.2. Having a Car Improves the Quality of Life
“When we will have no transportation, we will buy a place in the cemetery… Because we will have no life. Without my car, I will not be able to walk to any stores (Russian B)” [41]
3.6.3. Lack of Access to Public Transportation
“One Bhutanese older adult said, We get very little money. With that, we have to pay rent. We have to buy food or clothing. We don’t have enough money to spend on the bus. If we get a bus pass, that would be a huge help” [41]
3.6.4. Valuing Co-Ethnocultural Spaces within Neighborhoods
“These few blocks, these are my village. Because I know those people. [The] bus is near. And my temple is near. [When] I’m not feeling good I go there. And on Sunday I go and volunteer there… When we bought this house, we thought the gurdwara (temple) should be near—every weekend we should go.” [58]
3.7. Synthesized Finding 3
3.7.1. Safety and Neighborhood Deprivation
“In the following extract, Tian, a 69-year-old man, described his negative relationship with the neighborhood at the time when eggs were thrown at his daughter’s car. When the first author arrived at Tian’s home for the second interview, Tian was cleaning up his daughter’s car and told the first author: Kids threw chips and eggs at my daughter’s car. It’s frightening. I will remind myself to be careful in the future. For example, lock my doors and windows when I go out, and not to walk closely to a stranger.” [50]
3.7.2. Racial Discrimination and Ageism
“Latino kids, kind of acting rowdy, loud.” Later, in response to a question of whether there was anything he did not like about his neighborhood, he added: “What I don’t like is the sense that it’s become a little more dangerous, you know, in terms of reading about assaults, and seeing kids acting out, you know, on the street. You know, fifteen year olds, acting crazy” [61]
3.7.3. Linguistic Barriers
“As expressed by Xin (male, 76 years old, living in Australia for 9 years): “I sometimes see some neighbors in the park. But we don’t communicate much. It’s annoying because I have many words to say but I can’t express myself. I have learnt some simple sentences to communicate with them, but that’s not enough. It’s a pity that we don’t have any in-depth communication.” [44]
3.7.4. Civic Participation and Reciprocity
“An older Moroccan woman in Brussels, for example, said: I go to the community centre every day. I help with cooking and I’m involved in organising activities so that we can do things together. it’s important to mix with people from different cultural backgrounds. (64-year-old Moroccan woman, 17 years in the neighbourhood, Old-Molenbeek, Brussels)” [37]
3.7.5. Long-Time Tenure in Neighborhoods
“I wouldn’t want to [move away from here] because I don’t want to live far away from all the Turkish people. When I go out here I always meet family and friends on the street; and that gives me a sense of relief. I am already in a foreign country… if I would live somewhere far away from the Turkish community, it would feel as if I’m moving to a foreign country for the second time (69-year-old woman)” [38]
3.7.6. Changing Neighborhood Composition
“When I moved in, there were lots of Afro-Caribbean people in the road and lots of White people, and they moved out and Asian people have moved in… The whole area has changed in the last 20 years,” Marjorie described. Millicent highlighted that “all nationality eats different,” and with increasing Eastern European arrivals, food shops in her neighborhood started catering for them: “when you go in looking for something that you’re accustomed to, sometimes they don’t have it…” [51]
3.8. Synthesized Finding 4
3.8.1. Home Is Family
“Ali expressed how much he enjoyed spending leisure time with his grandchildren, playing with them in the backyard and going on daily walks with them around the neighborhood, which kept him “involved seeing how they are doing”. Ali had several grandchildren under the age of five and he explained how these connections filled him with gratitude because he was still physically able to play and build social bonds with them…” [25]
3.8.2. Gender Shapes Participation
“I only go shopping in the shop at the corner; I don’t go to [the supermarket] because I have to pass that square then where all the men are (63-year-old woman).” [38]
3.8.3. Pre-Migration Neighborhood Experiences
“Ana Paula described her life in the Dominican Republic, ‘Life there is never the same as life here… I lived in a… “campo” where you know everyone in the world.” She continued, I came here when I was 35 years old… My daughter be- came a citizen and requested me. After arriving here, well, you already know how life here is. Well here in many ways, one lives a life of ‘having it all.’ And at the same time, with yourself, you have nothing.’ She further explained, ‘Over there, in your own country, you don’t feel loneliness like you feel it here. Over there in the ‘campo’ you open your door in the morning and people say ‘hi, how are you?’ And that’s a different life. Not here. If it’s cold here you have to live in doors…” [40]
4. Discussion
4.1. Presence and Access to Co-Ethnolingustic Community
4.2. Discrimination across Intersections
4.3. Influence of Pre-Migration Neighborhood Experiences and Family
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Qualitative Research Item: | Included Studies | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Becares 2013 [34] | Brotman 2017 [35] | Buffel 2011 [36] | Buffel 2013 [37] | Buffel 2017 [38] | Chen 2022 [39] | Curtin 2017 [40] | Dabelko-Schoeny 2021 [41] | Dorkenoo 2021 [42] | Fang 2016 [43] | Gao 2020 [44] | Hawkins 2022 [45] | Herman 2021 [46] | Hsu 2014 [47] | Jagroep 2023 [48] | Lewis 2009 [49] | Li 2014 [50] | Lorinc 2022 [51] | Luo 2016 [52] | Morgan 2021 [53] | Nasir 2022 [25] | Parekh 2018 [54] | Rua 2017 [55] | Ryan 2021 [56] | Schuster 2019 [57] | Tong 2020 [58] | Wijekoon 2018 [59] | Xu 2023 [60] | Yen 2012 [61] | Zhan 2017 [62] | |
Q1 | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | N | U | N | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q3 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | N |
Q4 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q5 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q6 | U | U | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | U | Y | U | Y | U | Y | U | Y | Y | N | Y |
Q7 | U | U | Y | U | Y | U | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | U | Y | U | Y | U | Y | N | Y | Y | N | N |
Q8 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q9 | Y | U | N | U | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | N | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Q10 | U | U | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Total “Yes” (out of 10) | 7 | 6 | 8 | 7 | 8 | 8 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 8 | 10 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 10 | 9 | 6 | 8 | 9 | 7 | 10 | 8 | 9 | 8 | 10 | 8 | 10 | 10 | 7 | 8 |
Level of Credibility | Criterion |
---|---|
Unequivocal | Illustrations may be quotations or rich thick descriptions through observational data and/or contextual data Must be clear to the reviewer that the author’s statement was closely aligned with the illustration |
Credible | Illustrations may be quotations or rich thick descriptions through observational data and/or contextual data Author’s statements appeared to be a conceptual leap from the illustration |
Unsupported | Author statements do not have an accompanying illustration |
First Author and Year | Methodology/Method/Analysis | Phenomena of Interest | Setting | Participants |
---|---|---|---|---|
Becares 2013 [34] | Mixed methods; face to face interviews Content Analysis: Framework | The association between ethnic density, social capital, and health, in order to establish whether social capital mediates the association between ethnic density and health among ethnic minority groups in England. | England | 18 Jamaican Caribbean and 15 Gujarati Indian Hindu older adults aged between 65 and 74 years. |
Brotman 2017 [35] | Narrative photovoice; in-depth narrative interviews and photographs Intersectionality, critical life course, and photovoice framework used for analysis | Lived experiences of immigrant seniors. The impact of immigration on aging within the context of life histories. To understand the intersections of identity, social location, and structural discrimination across the lifespan. To explore the ways in which structural discrimination across the life-course shapes interactions with family, community, and formal services. | Canada: Quebec and British Columbia | 19 older adult immigrants. |
Buffel 2011 [36] | Semi-structured interviews Thematic Analysis | To explore experiences of “place” among older migrants living in deprived urban neighbourhoods. | Belgium (Brussels) and England (Manchester) | 20 Moroccan and 23 Turkish participants living in Brussels, Belgium, aged between 60 and 73. 19 Somali participants in Liverpool, England, and 20 Pakistani participants in Manchester, England. |
Buffel 2013 [37] | Semi-structured interviews Thematic Analysis | Conceptual and empirical aspects of the social exclusion debate, exploring links with issues of place and space in urban settings in two contrasting European nations. | Belgium (Brussels) and England (Manchester) | 124 British seniors with Pakistani, Somali, or Black Carribean origin, 102 Belgium seniors with Turkish or Moroccan origin aged 60 and over. |
Buffel 2017 [38] | Interviews Combination of thematic and content analysis | The ways in which ageing migrants experience the notion of ‘home’, both as a location and a set of relationships that contribute to feelings of belonging and identity. | Belgium; inner-city districts of Brussels | 34 first-generation Turkish labor migrants living in two neighboring districts in Brussels, 18 women and 16 men aged between 60 and 78. |
Chen 2022 [39] | Semi-structured, face-to-face interviews Constructive grounded theory analysis | To identify whether Chinatowns are a place for Chinese immigrants to age and explore their experience of aging in Chinatowns. | USA; New York City’s Chinatowns | 22 older adults (14 females) aged 60 years or older, originally migrated from China, previously lived in or currently live in one of three Chinese-immigrant cluster areas. Eight participants were over 75. |
Curtin 2017 [40] | Inductive qualitative descriptive design; semi-structured interviews Inductive analysis | Ageing out of place and the meaning of home for a group of older persons of Hispanic ethnicity. | USA; New England | 17 Hispanic older persons, 11 women and 6 men aged between 65 and 83, average age of 71 years. |
Dabelko-Schoeny 2021 [41] | Concurrent focus group discussions Rapid and Rigorous Qualitative Data Analysis (RADaR) technique and thematic analysis with an interactive team approach | Comprehensive understanding of the factors affecting transportation among diverse older adults. | USA; Central Ohio | 70 older adult volunteers represented culturally diverse immigrant and refugee communities, 40% men and 60% women. |
Dorkenoo 2021 [42] | Mixed method, sequential, equal-status; group interview, surveys GIS qualitative approach and thematic mapping for qualitative data, spatial analysis for quantitative data | Investigate the formal and informal social supports of Arabic-, Mandarin- and Spanish-speaking older immigrants in the City of Toronto, specifically what their experiences were as they age in place. | Canada; Ontario—Greater Toronto Area (GTA), Ottawa, Waterloo and London. | 95 participants aged 55 and over, speak Arabic, Mandarin, or Spanish as their native language. |
Fang 2016 [43] | Community-based participatory research; experiential group walks and participatory mapping exercises with visual (photograph) data Thematic analysis | Access experiences of place, identify facilitators and barriers to accessing the built environment and co-create place-based solutions among older people and service providers in a new affordable housing development in Western Canada. | Canada (Western) | 54 participants (N = 38 English and Mandarin-speaking older persons with diverse cultural backgrounds over the age of 60; N = 16 local service providers). |
Gao 2020 [44] | Mixed-method case study; travel diaries, mapping, and interviews Comparative method qualitative data analysis | Understanding green spaces and how they influence the well-being of older Chinese immigrants, within an Australian multicultural context through a lens situated in Chinese values and beliefs. Provide insights into why and how designing green spaces can better maintain the well-being of elderly immigrants in Australia. | Australia; City of Gold Coast; public parks, churches, and Chinese community centers | 30 Chinese immigrants aged 55 and above. |
Hawkins 2022 [45] | Community-engaged participatory narrative inquiry photovoice; photos and in-depth interviews Narrative inquiry and Barone and Eisner’s criteria for arts-based work | To explore the health influence and experience of older adult Russian- and Spanish-speaking English in southeastern Wisconsin, United States. | USA; southeastern Wisonsin | 23 older adult female Russian- and Spanish-speaking immigrants between the ages of 60 and 98. |
Herman 2021 [46] | Semi-structured, face-to-face interviews Inductive and iterative analysis | To examine the experiences of members of Saskatoon’s Chinese–Canadian older-adult community in terms of their realities of aging and access to important geriatric resources. | Canada; Saskatoon | 20 participants aged 55 or older, self-identify as Chinese–Canadian, no limitation on how long they had resided in Canada. |
Hsu 2014 [47] | Interviews, narratives No description of analysis | Claiming home through exercising agency and working out paradoxes concerning their living conditions, familial relations, and subjectivities. | Canada; Montreal’s Chinatown | 25 interviews with Chinese female seniors residing in Montreal’s Chinatown. Average age of 79 years. Their average age was 50 years when they moved to Canada, and the average time spent here was 25.58 years. |
Jagroep 2023 [48] | Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis | Explore how older Surinamese adults experienced their neighbourhood age-friendliness in general and during the COVID-19 pandemic. | Netherlands; Rotterdam or the Hague | 17 participants who were aged 70 or older, had a Surinamese migration background, the ability and willingness to answer questions in Dutch, and were community-dwelling (independently living). |
Lewis 2009 [49] | Ethnography; semi-structured and unstructured interviews, participant observations Ethnographic analysis, open and focused coding | Experiences and expectations of elderly Cambodian refugees who are aging out of place, far from the familiar cultural, social, and political landscape in which they lived and in which they developed an understanding of what it meant to be “old”. | USA; rural community in coastal Alabama | Elderly Cambodian participants from 125 families, aged 55 years and older. |
Li 2014 [50] | Semi-structured interviews Narrative thematic analysis | Investigate older Chinese migrants’ experiences of developing a sense of community (SOC) in their local communities. To better understand how everyday activities, processes, and practices foster multiple SOCs, the second section explores their SOC within the context of transnationalism. | New Zealand | 32 older Chinese migrants who ranged in age from 62 to 77 years; 18 female and 14 male. |
Lorinc 2022 [51] | Longitudinal, qualitatively driven multi-method study; in-depth interviews and follow-up walking interview Inductive thematic analysis | Investigate experiences of aging for older migrants in England, focusing on their well-being, care needs, and support. | England: London and Yorkshire | 45 older migrants from the Caribbean, Ireland, and Poland, the majority were older than 80; 9 were selected for follow-up interviews. |
Luo 2016 [52] | Focus group interviews Six-step thematic analysis | To explore the perceptions and experiences of older Chinese immigrants regarding their current life, social capital level, and residential environment, as well as their expectations of social capital and residential environment. The study also aimed to identify implications for policies and practices to improve the social capital of older Chinese immigrants through supportive living environments. | Canada | 43 Chinese immigrants born outside of Canada, the majority between 75 and 84 years. The participants had been living in Canada for an average of 15.8 years, with a range from 1 to 43 years. The majority of the participants were originally from mainland China, with a small number from Vietnam and Hong Kong. |
Morgan 2021 [53] | Mixed methods, intial qualitative phase; semi-structured individual and group interviews Thematic and narrative analysis | Older people’s protective factors that enable or foster social connectedness, and factors that prevent or operate as barriers to social connectedness. | New Zealand; Aotearoa | Diverse group of Pacific, Māori, Asian, and New Zealand European older adults. 44 participants took part in individual in-depth interviews and 32 participants took part across three group discussions. |
Nasir 2022 [25] | Constructivist narrative inquiry; narrative interview and follow-up sessions Thematic analysis | To understand the social relationships of aging Muslim Lebanese immigrants living in Canada by exploring their lives in their ethnic and wider communities. | Canada; London, Ontario | 4 participants who were English or Arabic speaking, Muslim immigrants from Lebanon, 60 years of age and over, and immigrated to Canada in early adulthood. |
Parekh 2018 [54] | Community-based participatory research study; individual and focus group interviews Interpretive qualitative framework analysis | To explore the role of social capital (e.g., social support through indirect ties) and social cohesion (e.g., interdependent support among neighbors) to unravel pathways for building age-friendly communities. | USA | Older adults aged 55 and over, with African-American, Hispanic, or Vietnamese descent; 15 participants for individual interviews and 45 participants for focus group interviews. |
Rúa 2017 [55] | Narrative inquiry and ethnography; participant observation, collection of life histories, and semi-structured interviews | To examine how urban revitalization processes in Chicago are impacting the experiences and well-being of Puerto Rican elderly individuals who have been displaced from their communities. | USA; Chicago | 25 Latina and Latino older adults living in three different subsidized housing complexes on Chicago’s Near Northwest Side. |
Ryan 2021 [56] | Interview and walking interviews Thematic analysis | To understand how older migrants, especially in advanced old age, navigated ageing and care in place. | England; London and Yorkshire | 45 older migrants from the Caribbean, Ireland, and Poland, the majority were older than 80; 9 were selected for follow-up interviews. |
Schuster 2019 [57] | Narrative inquiry; face-to-face interviews in three sessions Inductive narrative analysis | Identify the roles recent older Canadian immigrants play within their families and communities, the challenges, facilitators, and pressures they encounter in doing so, and the benefits or drawbacks they experience regarding contributing to their surroundings. | Canada | 4 older immigrant participants who have lived in Canada for at least 5 years and moved to live with family in Canada. |
Tong 2020 [58] | Ethnography; in-depth semi-structured interviews | To characterize the PA habits of multilingual and non-English-speaking FBOAs who reside in South Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. | Canada; Vancouver | 18 Chinese or South Asian older adults. |
Wijekoon 2018 [59] | An interpretive paradigm and hermeneutic phenomenology; phenomenological interviews and photo-elicitation interviews Interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) | Understand how late-life immigrants Relate to, and connect and engage with, places through aging processes, and the essentiality of daily occupations within such engagement. | Canada; Ontario, Greater Toronto Area (GTA) | 10 participants aged between 72 and 82. All participants immigrated from Sri Lanka to Canada under the Parent and Grandparent (PGP) Sponsorship Program between 2007 and 2013. |
Xu 2023 [60] | Face-to-face interviews Thematic analysis | To explore social exclusion and its risk factors among older Chinese adults in greater Los Angeles. | USA; Los Angeles | 24 Chinese Americans aged 65+. |
Yen 2012 [61] | Face-to-face interviews Thematic analysis | Identify the types of resources that people use in their residential settings to maintain or improve their overall well-being. | USA; San Francisco Bay Area | 38 participants aged 65 and over who self-identified as White, African American, Latino, or Asian American |
Zhan 2017 [62] | Surveys and interviews | Examine Chinese immigrant elders’ report of their sense of home and life satisfaction. | USA; Atlanta | 107 Chinese American participants completed surveys and 21 participants completed interviews. Participants ranged from 59 to 93 years. |
Synthesized Finding: | Categories |
---|---|
1. Walkability can be improved by enhancing safety features of neighborhoods to address physical disability limitations that are exacerbated by winter weather conditions. Preferences about living in areas with warmer climate, clean spaces, and accessible greenspaces that allow for socialization were important factors for IOAs to feel comfortable in their neighborhood. | 1.1 Physical accessibility and walkability |
1.2 Winter weather challenges | |
1.3 Importance of clean and maintained spaces | |
1.4 Availability of nearby green spaces | |
2. Lack of accessibility and safety in transportation caused by discrimination based on language, race, and disability restricted access to valued amenities and social spaces within and beyond the neighborhood which exacerbated social isolation. Transportation is most critical to prevent isolation when culturally and linguistically familiar spaces are located outside neighborhood boundaries. | 2.1 Discriminatory experience in using public transportation |
2.2 Having a car improves the quality of life | |
2.3 Lack of access to public transportation | |
2.4 Valuing co-ethnocultural spaces within neighborhoods | |
3. Racial discrimination, ageism, neighborhood deprivation, and linguistic barriers result in reports of poor social cohesion. Positive neighborhood perceptions were characterized by strong social cohesion via trust, reciprocity, and sense of belonging which was facilitated by having lived in a neighborhood for a long time, knowing one’s neighbors well (irrespective of cultural and linguistic similarities), and the presence of co-ethnolinguistic community. | 3.1 Safety and neighborhood deprivation |
3.2 Racial discrimination and ageism | |
3.3 Linguistic barriers | |
3.4 Civic participation and reciprocity | |
3.5 Long-time tenure in neighborhoods | |
3.6 Changing Neighborhood Composition | |
4. Non-neighborhood-specific influences—premigration neighborhood experiences, gendered roles and expectations, and co-residence with family—had strong influences on both the choice of neighborhood to reside in and sense of belonging to the neighbourhood. | 4.1 Home is family |
4.2 Gender shapes participation | |
4.3 Pre-migration neighborhood experiences |
Population: Immigrant Older Adults (IOAs) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phenomena of Interest: Experiences and Perceptions of Neighborhoods | |||||
Context: Any Country; Geographical Space in Proximity to where Older Adults Live | |||||
Synthesized Finding | Type of Research | Dependability | Credibility | ConQual Score | Comments |
Synthesized finding 1 | Qualitative | High (No downgrading) | Moderate (Downgrade one level) | Moderate | Dependability: Majority of studies (11/13) scored 4 and 5 for the questions relating to appropriateness of the conduct of the research. Credibility: Downgraded one level due to mix of unequivocal (U) and credible (C) findings. U = 28, C = 4 |
Synthesized finding 2 | Qualitative | High (No downgrading) | Moderate (Downgrade one level) | Moderate | Dependability: Majority of studies (15/25) scored 4 and 5 for the questions relating to appropriateness of the conduct of the research. Credibility: Downgraded one level due to mix of unequivocal (U) and credible (C) findings. U = 70, C = 9 |
Synthesized finding 3 | Qualitative | High (No downgrading) | Moderate (Downgrade one level) | Moderate | Dependability: Majority of studies (17/26) scored 4 and 5 for the questions relating to appropriateness of the conduct of the research. Credibility: Downgraded one level due to mix of unequivocal (U) and credible (C) findings. U = 95, C = 16 |
Synthesized finding 4 | Qualitative | High (No downgrading) | Moderate (Downgrade one level) | Moderate | Dependability: Majority of studies (11/15) scored 4 and 5 for the questions relating to appropriateness of the conduct of the research. Credibility: Downgraded one level due to mix of unequivocal (U) and credible (C) findings. U = 41, C = 5 |
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Au, A.; Murad-Kassam, S.; Mukanoheli, V.; Idrees, S.; Ben Mabrouk, E.; Abdi, K.; Kennedy, M.; Whitfield, K.; Salma, J. Immigrant Older Adults’ Experiences of Aging in Place and Their Neighborhoods: A Qualitative Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 904. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21070904
Au A, Murad-Kassam S, Mukanoheli V, Idrees S, Ben Mabrouk E, Abdi K, Kennedy M, Whitfield K, Salma J. Immigrant Older Adults’ Experiences of Aging in Place and Their Neighborhoods: A Qualitative Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(7):904. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21070904
Chicago/Turabian StyleAu, Alesia, Sadaf Murad-Kassam, Vestine Mukanoheli, Sobia Idrees, Esra Ben Mabrouk, Khadija Abdi, Megan Kennedy, Kyle Whitfield, and Jordana Salma. 2024. "Immigrant Older Adults’ Experiences of Aging in Place and Their Neighborhoods: A Qualitative Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 7: 904. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21070904
APA StyleAu, A., Murad-Kassam, S., Mukanoheli, V., Idrees, S., Ben Mabrouk, E., Abdi, K., Kennedy, M., Whitfield, K., & Salma, J. (2024). Immigrant Older Adults’ Experiences of Aging in Place and Their Neighborhoods: A Qualitative Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(7), 904. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21070904