Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Does high-profile political rhetoric on anti-Asian violence affect mental health among Chinese older adults? What information mechanisms shape Chinese older adults’ political views? In collaboration with a trusted ethnic social service organization, we conducted a pen-and-paper survey experiment at a senior center in Flushing with 415 Chinese older adults aged 60 and older in 2023, followed by semi-structured interviews with a subsample of 30 respondents in 2024. For this information-treatment experiment, respondents were randomly assigned to view one of three media images containing a neutral, negative, or positive example of rhetoric on COVID-19 and anti-Asian violence. We find that political rhetoric had no significant impact on four measures of mental health—anxiety, depression, PTSD, and stress. The null findings raised two questions: how did older Chinese immigrants understand these messages, and did they experience them as psychologically meaningful? Our interviews point to two information mechanisms that explain this null finding: an information disconnect regarding Biden’s anti-Asian hate message and factual skepticism toward Trump’s “Chinese virus” reference.