ABSTRACT
Since the mid-1970s, approximately 700,000 émigrés from the former Soviet Union (FSU), most of Jewish descent, settled in the United States. Now, 25 or more years post-emigration, they have “aged in place” in the United States, but their values, beliefs, and attitudes about growing old, memory changes, and Alzheimer’s disease remain grounded in their earlier life experiences. Based on findings from a study of the social and cultural factors affecting beliefs about Alzheimer’s disease, aging, and memory loss, this article examines how past life experiences, the immigration experience, and cultural values affect Russian-speaking refugees’ beliefs and views about aging, memory loss, and Alzheimer’s disease.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to express their thanks to Ellen Navarro, the Project Director, Natalya Manischevitz, the Russian interviewer/translator, and Olesya Kisselev, who completed the second transcription/translation.
Funding
This project was funded by a grant (IIRG-06-26520) from the Alzheimer’s Association.