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The influence of illness representations on help-seeking and coping for anxiety among older adults: A multicultural qualitative study

Version 2 2025-03-07, 15:53
Version 1 2025-03-04, 17:14
dataset
posted on 2025-03-07, 15:53 authored by Rasha AlkholyRasha Alkholy, Penny Bee, Rebecca PedleyRebecca Pedley, Karina Lovell

Dataset:

The anonymised dataset is available for restricted data-sharing. Access to the dataset will be restricted to authenticated researchers who provide verifiable institutional affiliation and have ethical approval in place.

To submit an access request, please email: Rasha.Alkholy@manchester.ac.uk

The data list includes:

  1. semi-structured interview topic guide,
  2. sociodemographic data form,
  3. anonymised dataset which includes:
  • anonymised data from the sociodemographic data form, the Geriatric Anxiety Scale and the Geriatric Depression Scale-Short Form;
  • anonymised textual transcripts of semi-structured interviews.

Research aim and objectives:

The overarching aim of the multicultural qualitative study was to explore and compare illness representations of anxiety and beliefs underlying coping behaviours among self-reporting White British, South Asian and African or Caribbean older adults in the UK.

Sampling:

Inclusion criteria:

  • 65 years or over;
  • self-identified as “worrier”, had experienced or were experiencing anxiety or “stress”;
  • self-identified as White British, South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi), African or Caribbean;
  • lived independently in the UK.

Exclusion criteria:

  • older adult receiving mental health crisis management.

Data collection procedures:

Participants had two interviews:

  • the first was used to audio-record their verbal consent and responses to three questionnaires (the sociodemographic data form, the Geriatric Depression Scale-Short Form and the Geriatric Anxiety Scale);
  • the second was a semi-structured interview (following a topic guide).



Funding

The President’s Doctoral Scholar Award funded by The University of Manchester, UK.

History

Research ethics approval number

The study received ethical approval from the University of Manchester Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 2021-10461-17766).