THE USE OF SOCIAL SERVICES BY BLACK AND WHITE ELDERLY
- 12 August 1982
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Gerontological Social Work
- Vol. 4 (3-4) , 107-125
- https://doi.org/10.1300/j083v04n03_10
Abstract
Little is known about the roles of the family, kin, and non-kin support networks in determining the use of social services by the elderly. The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the formal and informal support systems in explaining social service utilization by Black and White elderly. Path analytic procedures are used to test an explanatory model of utilization by a national area probability sample of 3.996 non-institutionalized elderly. The findings indicate that informal family support was more important for Black elderly than White elderly. In addition, family aid was found to be supplementary rather than an alternative support system. In the planning, designing, and delivery of social services to the elderly, it is imperative that racial and cultural differences become explicit input factors. Additionally, future researchers have a responsibility to employ research procedures capable of simultaneously dealing with a comprehensive range of variables in investigating this rather complex p...Keywords
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