Identity Development and Disruption in Older Adults During COVID-19: A Longitudinal, Mixed-Methods Study.

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Lauren L Mitchell, Mary K Burns, Daniel Koch Impellizzeri, Victoria R Falso, Maeve Famularo, Jessica M Finlay
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Abstract

Objectives: Disruptive life events, such as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, may trigger adjustment and revision of older adults' identities. This mixed-methods study explored how older adults perceived their identities changing as a result of the pandemic, and how such identity dynamics related to pandemic-related events and well-being.

Methods: Participants included 2,248 older adults who participated in the longitudinal COVID-19 Coping Study spanning from April/May 2020 to April/May 2021. Mean age was 67.8 years, 70% were women, and 93% were White. We used qualitative thematic analysis to identify the ways the pandemic affected participants' identities. We then investigated the association between identity themes and testing positive for COVID-19, having a friend or family member hospitalized or dying due to COVID-19, or being vaccinated. Finally, we tested whether identity disruption was associated with 12-month trajectories of well-being (including life satisfaction, loneliness, depressive symptoms, anxiety, and self-rated health) using latent growth curve models.

Results: Some participants reported positive identity themes, such as rethinking and revising priorities and realization of strength and resilience. Others indicated harmful effects, including identity disruption. Individuals reporting identity disruption had worse well-being at baseline and remained consistently worse over time.

Discussion: Findings highlight that identity remains malleable in later life and that stressful events like the COVID-19 pandemic may trigger positive adaptive identity processes, but can also cause identity disruption that is associated with persistently worse well-being over time.

COVID-19 期间老年人的身份发展与中断:一项纵向混合方法研究。
目的:COVID-19大流行病等破坏性生活事件可能会引发老年人身份的调整和修正。这项混合方法研究探讨了老年人如何看待他们的身份因大流行病而发生的变化,以及这种身份动态与大流行病相关事件和福祉之间的关系:参与者包括参加 COVID-19 应对纵向研究的 2248 名老年人,研究时间跨度为 2020 年 4 月/5 月至 2021 年 4 月/5 月。平均年龄为 67.8 岁,70% 为女性,93% 为白人。我们使用定性主题分析来确定大流行对参与者身份的影响方式。然后,我们调查了身份主题与 COVID-19 检测呈阳性、朋友或家人因 COVID-19 而住院或死亡或接种疫苗之间的关联。最后,我们使用潜在增长曲线模型检验了身份破坏是否与 12 个月的幸福感轨迹(包括生活满意度、孤独感、抑郁症状、焦虑和自评健康)相关:一些参与者报告了积极的身份认同主题,如重新思考和修正优先事项以及认识到自己的力量和复原力。另一些人则表示受到了有害影响,包括身份混乱。报告身份混乱的个体在基线时的幸福感较差,并且随着时间的推移持续恶化:讨论:研究结果突出表明,身份认同在晚年生活中仍具有可塑性,像 COVID-19 大流行病这样的压力事件可能会引发积极的适应性身份认同过程,但也可能导致身份认同中断,这种中断与随着时间推移持续恶化的幸福感有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
8.10%
发文量
178
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Gerontology: Psychological Sciences publishes articles on development in adulthood and old age that advance the psychological science of aging processes and outcomes. Articles have clear implications for theoretical or methodological innovation in the psychology of aging or contribute significantly to the empirical understanding of psychological processes and aging. Areas of interest include, but are not limited to, attitudes, clinical applications, cognition, education, emotion, health, human factors, interpersonal relations, neuropsychology, perception, personality, physiological psychology, social psychology, and sensation.
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