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1. Stressors and coping mechanisms of family care-givers of older relatives living with long-term conditions in mainland China: a scoping review of the evidence.

2. The effects of adult child migration and migration duration on the emotional health of rural elders in China.

3. The impact of living arrangements and intergenerational support on the health status of older people in China: are rural residents disadvantaged compared to urban residents?

4. Downward transfer of support and care: understanding the cultural lag in rural China.

5. Receipt of informal care in the Chinese older population.

6. Public–private pension mixes in East Asia: institutional diversity and policy implications for old-age security.

7. Does housing liquidity matter? Housing property rights and labour market participation of older migrants in China.

8. Age-related loss of resources and perceived old age in China.

9. Mental health of older migrants migrating along with adult children in China: a systematic review.

10. Religiosity and health among Chinese older adults: a meta-analytic review.

11. Pensions and social inclusion in an ageing China.

12. Gender, capital endowment and digital exclusion of older people in China.

13. Health and marital status of older Chinese couples and implications for intergenerational co-residence.

14. Informal care provision across multiple generations in China.

15. Older people and decision-making following acute stroke in China: ‘hiding’ as a barrier to active involvement.

16. Older people's realisation of generativity in a changing society: the case of Hong Kong.

17. Family care-giving and living arrangements of functionally impaired elders in rural China.

18. Intergenerational solidarity and old-age support for the social inclusion of elders in Mainland China: the changing roles of family and government.

19. Family relations and life satisfaction of older people: a comparative study between two different hukous in China.

20. Willingness to live in eldercare institutions among older adults in urban and rural China: a nationwide study.

21. The erosion of filial piety by modernisation in Chinese cities.

22. The prevalence of and risk factors for loneliness among older people in China.

23. Leisure participation amongst Hong Kong Chinese older adults.

24. The relationship between gender and the psychological impact of urinary incontinence on older people in Hong Kong: an exploratory analysis.

25. Own health, spousal health and transitions in loneliness among middle-aged and older adults in China.

26. Whose migration matters? The role of migration in social networks and mental health among rural older adults in China.

27. The effect of retirement on the health of elderly people: evidence from China.

28. Life satisfaction among older adults in urban China: does gender interact with pensions, social support and self-care ability?

29. Embodying ageing: middle-aged and older women's bodily fitness and aesthetics in urban China.

30. The impact of old-age pensions on the happiness level of elderly people – evidence from China.

31. Perceived stigma towards Alzheimer's disease and related dementia among Chinese older adults: do social networks matter?

32. The power of culture: the gendered impact of family structures and living arrangements on social networks of Chinese older adults.

33. Perceptions and expectations of filial piety among older Chinese immigrants in Canada.

34. Social capital, built environment and mental health: a comparison between the local elderly people and the ' laopiao ' in urban China.

35. Association between childhood conditions and arthritis among middle-aged and older adults in China: the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study.

36. Providing instrumental support to older parents of multi-child families in China: are there different within-family patterns?

37. Comparing socio-economic inequalities in healthy ageing in the United States of America, England, China and Japan: evidence from four longitudinal studies of ageing.

38. Catastrophic health expenditure and health-related quality of life among older adults in China.

39. Constructing a hero–victim identity through reminiscing: a phenomenological study on rural Chinese elders.

40. Is informal care sufficient to meet the long-term care needs of older people with disabilities in China? Evidence from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey.

41. A multi-dimensional perspective on the gender gap in health among older adults in India and China: application of a new ageing measure.

42. Subjective wellbeing of Chinese elderly: a comparative analysis among Hong Kong, Urban China and Taiwan.

43. The impacts of gender on seasonal retirement mobility and wellbeing.

44. Filial piety and intergenerational ambivalence among mother–adult child dyads in rural China.

45. Widowhood and mortality risk of older people in rural China: do gender and living arrangement make a difference?

46. Contradictory and consistent views on designing an inclusive community-based centre for older people: a mixed-methods study of different age groups in China.

47. Urban–rural disparities in cardiovascular disease risks among middle-aged and older Chinese: two decades of urbanisation.

48. Promises and pitfalls of integrating home-based health services into Shanghai's elder-care system.

49. Living arrangement preferences and realities for elderly Chinese: implications for subjective wellbeing.

50. It was all planned … now what? Claiming agency in later life in reforming China.