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Chinese healthcare professionals’ perceptions of interventions in elder abuse: a qualitative study
by
Huang, Danchen
, Zhang, Yuan
, Yi, Qinqiuzi
, Chen, Caie
in
Abuse
/ Abuse of
/ Adult
/ Adult abuse & neglect
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Attitude of Health Personnel - ethnology
/ Behavior
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ China
/ China - ethnology
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Content analysis
/ Data collection
/ Elder abuse
/ Elder Abuse - ethnology
/ Elder Abuse - prevention & control
/ Elder Abuse - psychology
/ Elder Abuse - therapy
/ Empathy
/ Environmental aspects
/ Environmental factors
/ Environmental impact
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ Health care
/ Health Personnel - psychology
/ Health services
/ Healthcare professionals
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Influence
/ Intervention
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Nurses
/ Older people
/ Palliative care
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ Perceptions of elder abuse intervention
/ Physicians
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Public opinion
/ Qualitative Research
/ Rehabilitation
/ Social cognitive theory
2025
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Chinese healthcare professionals’ perceptions of interventions in elder abuse: a qualitative study
by
Huang, Danchen
, Zhang, Yuan
, Yi, Qinqiuzi
, Chen, Caie
in
Abuse
/ Abuse of
/ Adult
/ Adult abuse & neglect
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Attitude of Health Personnel - ethnology
/ Behavior
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ China
/ China - ethnology
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Content analysis
/ Data collection
/ Elder abuse
/ Elder Abuse - ethnology
/ Elder Abuse - prevention & control
/ Elder Abuse - psychology
/ Elder Abuse - therapy
/ Empathy
/ Environmental aspects
/ Environmental factors
/ Environmental impact
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ Health care
/ Health Personnel - psychology
/ Health services
/ Healthcare professionals
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Influence
/ Intervention
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Nurses
/ Older people
/ Palliative care
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ Perceptions of elder abuse intervention
/ Physicians
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Public opinion
/ Qualitative Research
/ Rehabilitation
/ Social cognitive theory
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Chinese healthcare professionals’ perceptions of interventions in elder abuse: a qualitative study
by
Huang, Danchen
, Zhang, Yuan
, Yi, Qinqiuzi
, Chen, Caie
in
Abuse
/ Abuse of
/ Adult
/ Adult abuse & neglect
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Attitude of Health Personnel - ethnology
/ Behavior
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ China
/ China - ethnology
/ Cognition & reasoning
/ Content analysis
/ Data collection
/ Elder abuse
/ Elder Abuse - ethnology
/ Elder Abuse - prevention & control
/ Elder Abuse - psychology
/ Elder Abuse - therapy
/ Empathy
/ Environmental aspects
/ Environmental factors
/ Environmental impact
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ Health care
/ Health Personnel - psychology
/ Health services
/ Healthcare professionals
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Influence
/ Intervention
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Nurses
/ Older people
/ Palliative care
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ Perceptions of elder abuse intervention
/ Physicians
/ Professionals
/ Public health
/ Public opinion
/ Qualitative Research
/ Rehabilitation
/ Social cognitive theory
2025
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Chinese healthcare professionals’ perceptions of interventions in elder abuse: a qualitative study
Journal Article
Chinese healthcare professionals’ perceptions of interventions in elder abuse: a qualitative study
2025
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Overview
Background
Elder abuse is a growing public health concern in aging Chinese populations, yet timely intervention by healthcare professionals is often hindered by cultural factors. This study aimed to explore hospital-based healthcare professionals’ perceptions of elder abuse interventions across personal, behavioral, and environmental dimensions, to inform future training program design.
Methods
This qualitative study explored perceptions of elder abuse interventions through semi-structured interviews with 24 participants (12 medical doctors and 12 nurses) from two tertiary hospitals in Yichang, China. Data were analyzed using directed content analysis based on Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) to examine cultural influences and professional differences.
Results
Perceptions regarding elder abuse interventions were dynamically influenced by the interaction of personal factors (knowledge and skills, outcome expectancies, self-efficacy, and role cognition), behavioral factors (direct and indirect intervention), and environmental factors (family, hospital, and government levels). A distinct cultural theme—family boundary concerns—significantly influenced intervention willingness. Nurses highlighted empathy, life care, and public support, whereas medical doctors emphasized professional responsibility and institutional coordination.
Conclusions
Findings support the SCT triadic reciprocal determinism: personal factors influence and are influenced by behavioral and environmental elements. Consequently, a multilevel strategy aligned with SCT, such as enhancing personal capacity, strengthening institutional support, and optimizing systemic safeguards, is essential to empower hospital-based healthcare professionals to intervene in elder abuse.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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