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Family Services

Press Conference on the result announcement of the ‘Relationship between Adversity Coping Capability, Family Well-Being, and Innovative Family Services during the COVID-19 Outbreak’
29/12/2021

The pandemic has continued to evolve and brought immense pressure to Hong Kongers under the “new normal”. To better understand Hong Kongers’ coping capabilities and their relationships with their family members, as well as how family services can cater to family members in need, the Jockey Club SMART Family-Link Project (“The Project”) team from the School of Public Health, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong (“HKU”) conducted both telephone (landlines and mobiles included) and online surveys for 7,438 Hong Kong adults between February and March 2021. The key findings are as follows – for detailed survey findings, please refer to the appendix【Download Link】:

  • 53.9% of respondents reported high coping capability against adversity in their families
  • Coping capabilities positively correlate with age: A higher percentage of respondents from older age groups showed greater coping capabilities against adversity, as compared to respondents from younger age groups.
  • Respondents with higher family adversity coping capabilities had a lower prevalence of anxiety and depressive symptoms.
  • More respondents with high family adversity coping capabilities reported themselves as having better personal well-being (health & happiness) as well as family well-being (happiness & quality of communication).
  • Respondents with lower family adversity coping capabilities were less willing to attend family services or activities when they encounter family problems. They tend to prefer emotion and pressure management-related activities organized by social service agencies that are held online.

Dr. Kelvin Wang Man-Ping, Associate Professor, School of Nursing, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, HKU and Co-Investigator, Jockey Club SMART Family-Link Project commented that the pandemic has resulted in negative impacts on families. Practising high coping capabilities, sharing each other’s burdens, offering mutual support to your family members and showing care for one another are key ingredients to maintaining harmony under the same rooftop.

Professor Lam Tai-hing, Sir Robert Kotewall Professor in Public Health, Chair Professor of Community Medicine of School of Public Health, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine and the Principal Investigator of the Jockey Club SMART Family-Link Project  believed that under the new normal, every sector must be savvy in Information Communications Technology (ICT), including social media and gaming, to facilitate better and quality communication between family members and friends as we ride out this pandemic. Professor Lam suggested that the pandemic, despite having put stress on family service centres by substantially reducing contact and their service with and for their beneficiaries, could be turned into an opportunity for more innovations in preventive interventions. According to the survey, it is deemed essential for frontline workers to consider more online programmes on emotion management and pressure management.

Professor Lam added that the Project’s Family Portal is free – other initiatives such as a social media-based photo-taking competition, titled ‘SMART Appreciation Challenge’, to encourage family members to express gratitude to one another, as well as the Project’s web-based online family quiz game which centred on the themes of pandemic prevention, exercising and eating habits, aimed to assist members of the public to do away the stress from the external macro-environment.

The Jockey Club SMART Family-Link Project assists 26 NGO‐operated Integrated Family Service Centres and Integrated Service Centres to promote family well‐being. The Project develops an online platform for capacity building, co‐creation and co‐learning for frontline staff; and organises public education and knowledge transfer programmes to strengthen family functioning. The Project encourages Hong Kongers to improve family ties with the use of ICT; it also promotes and had debuted 15 mobile apps for families to use together.

Project Manager and registered social worker, Mr. Stone Tsang, from Hung Hom Integrated Family Services Centre (HHIFSC) of Hong Kong Children & Youth Services, who is also a partner of the Project, further added that the pandemic has put stress on marital relationships with added conflicts and arguments. As such, the centre has debuted a series of marital relationship enhancement workshops for married couples that leverage on the “Language of Love” and the understanding of our five senses so participants can acknowledge each other’s virtues and get to know each other better. The workshops help couples relax and boost their intimacy via the app, “SMART Emotion”, which was designed by the Project team.

Mr. Jeremy Li, who is also a registered social worker and another representative of the HHIFSC, also said that intimate yoga moves can also help couples discover each other’s potential and other virtues while taking on new ICT tools. The feedback from service users of these workshops echo with the survey results, which conclude that those with low coping capabilities against adversity tend to be less receptive towards in-person family services – that’s why ICT tools can open another communication channel with one another. Through experiencing novel activities together and a taste of mobile applications, new, fond memories are created and it is believed that couples could then be more cooperative and resilient in face of challenges ahead.