Abstract
This study examined age-related emotional responses and coping at the peak and the end of the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong. Three hundred and eighty-five Hong Kong Chinese, aged 18–86 years, rated the extent that they experienced ‘shock’, ‘sadness’, ‘anger’ and ‘fear’ in the face of SARS. They also completed selected items from Brief COPE (Carver, Citation1997). The results showed that older adults consistently experienced less anger than did their younger counterparts. Younger adults used more emotion-focused coping than did middle-aged and older adults at the peak of SARS; yet they exhibited the lowest increase in this form of coping throughout the outbreak, such that the age differences had reversed by the end of the outbreak. Findings of this study suggest that older adults may be better at emotional regulation than are their younger counterparts, they react to a crisis with less anger and are better able to adapt their coping strategies to the changing environment.
Acknowledgements
The studies reported in this paper were supported by Hong Kong Research Grants Council Earmarked Research Grant CUHK4256/03H and a Chinese University of Hong Kong Direct Grant awarded to Helene Fung.
Notes
Note
1The patterns of results were similar regardless of whether emotion-focused coping was examined as a general category or split into adaptive emotion-focused coping (use of emotional support, positive reframing, acceptance, religion, and humor) and maladaptive emotion-focused coping (substance use, self-distraction, self-blame, denial, behavior disengagement, and venting). This study thus used the general category for analysis.