Clarifying and measuring filial concepts across five cultural groups

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Abstract

Literature on responsibility of adult children for aging parents reflects lack of conceptual clarity. We examined filial concepts across five cultural groups: African-, Asian-, Euro-, Latino-, and Native Americans. Data were randomly divided for scale development (n=285) and cross-validation (n=284). Exploratory factor analysis on 59 items identified three filial concepts: Responsibility, Respect, and Care. Confirmatory factor analysis on a 12-item final scale showed data fit the three-factor model better than a single factor solution despite substantial correlations between the factors (82, 82 for Care with Responsibility and Respect, and 74 for Responsibility with Respect). The scale can be used in cross-cultural research to test hypotheses that predict associations among filial values, filial caregiving, and caregiver health outcomes. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Jones, P. S., Lee, J. W., & Zhang, X. E. (2011). Clarifying and measuring filial concepts across five cultural groups. Research in Nursing and Health, 34(4), 310–326. https://doi.org/10.1002/nur.20444

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