War-Related Life Course Stress and Late-Life Subjective Age in Northern Vietnam

Author:

Korinek Kim1ORCID,Young Yvette2,Schmidt Jefferson1,Toan Tran Khanh3,Zimmer Zachary4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Utah , Salt Lake City, Utah , USA

2. Laboratory of Migration and Mobility, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research , Rostock , Germany

3. Hanoi Medical University Department of Preventive Medicine, , Hanoi , Vietnam

4. Department of Family Studies and Gerontology, Center for Global Aging and Community, Mount Saint Vincent University , Halifax , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives The role of early life stressors in subjective aging is weakly understood, especially in low- to middle-income countries. This paper investigated how early life stressors encountered in armed conflict influence subjective age among Vietnamese older adults who experienced war over decades of their early life. Research Design and Methods We analyzed survey data from the 2018 Vietnam Health and Aging Study involving 2,447 Vietnamese older adults who encountered diverse war-related stressors in early adulthood. The analytical sample (N = 2,341) included 50.9% women and 49.1% men, with an average age of 69.8. 41.1% are military veterans. We conducted survey-adjusted multinomial logistic regression analyses with mediation to predict the probability of feeling younger or older than one’s chronological age. We examined how childhood adversity (i.e., childhood hunger and low parental SES) and wartime stressors (i.e., war-related violence, malevolent environment, and military service) influenced late-life subjective age, both directly and as mediated by late-life mental, functional, and physical health. Results We found significant associations between early adulthood war-related stressors and subjective age. Formal military service significantly lessened the relative risk of feeling subjectively old, and more plentiful wartime violence exposures significantly increased the risk of feeling younger than one’s chronological age. Violence exposure’s effects were both direct and indirect through functional and mental health. Conversely, greater exposure to wartime malevolent conditions (e.g., shortages of clean water and evacuations) and multiple episodes of severe hunger in childhood increased the risk of feeling older, effects both direct and mediated by late-life functional and mental health. Discussion and Implications Results suggest wartime stressors, especially war’s malevolent environments and severe childhood hunger, experienced in many conflict-affected populations globally, have the potential to subjectively “age” survivors. Yet, not all war exposures are equal, and some may yield psychological and socioeconomic resources that support healthy aging.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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