Perceived Spousal Similarity in Outlook on Life: Implications for Later-Life Well-Being.

IF 3.2
Yue Qin, Sara Moorman, Michal Engelman
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Abstract

Objectives: People tend to choose marital partners who are similar to themselves, and spouses become increasingly similar in some respects due to shared life experiences. However, it is unknown whether spousal similarity contributes to the health of married people in later life. This study investigates whether and how spousal similarity in outlook on life is linked to later-life well-being.

Methods: We used data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, a long-running prospective study following graduates from Wisconsin high schools in 1957 and their selected siblings. We measured perceived spousal similarity in outlook on life at both the individual (ie, self-evaluation) and couple (ie, concordance/discordance in evaluations between spouses) levels when participants were, 65 years old, on average. Later-life well-being was measured by self-rated general health, functional limitations, loneliness, depression, and cognitive health 16 years later.

Results: Reporting strong spousal similarity in outlook on life was associated with lower risks of loneliness and cognitive impairment in later life, after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, spousal similarity in other aspects, individual outlook on life, marital quality, and marital dissolution. Compared with both spouses reporting "very similar," reporting less spousal similarity than the spouse was associated with higher risks of loneliness and cognitive impairment, after controlling for those covariates.

Discussion: Spousal similarity is an important marital attribute that could shape health inequality among married people. It is associated with less loneliness and cognitive impairment in later life. Self-perception of spousal similarity appears to better predict later-life well-being than concordance/discordance in both spouses' evaluations.

感知配偶在人生观上的相似性:对晚年幸福的影响。
目的:人们倾向于选择与自己相似的婚姻伴侣,配偶由于共同的生活经历而在某些方面变得越来越相似。然而,尚不清楚配偶的相似性是否有助于已婚人士晚年的健康。这项研究调查了配偶在人生观方面的相似性是否以及如何与晚年生活的幸福感联系在一起。方法:我们使用了威斯康星纵向研究的数据,这是一项长期的前瞻性研究,追踪了1957年威斯康星高中毕业生及其选定的兄弟姐妹。当参与者平均年龄为65岁时,我们测量了个人(即自我评价)和夫妻(即配偶之间评价的一致性/不一致性)在人生观方面的感知相似性。晚年的幸福感是通过自我评估的一般健康、功能限制、孤独、抑郁和16年后的认知健康来衡量的。结果:在控制了社会人口学特征、配偶在其他方面的相似性、个人人生观、婚姻质量和婚姻破裂后,报告配偶在人生观方面的相似性与晚年孤独感和认知障碍的风险较低相关。在控制了这些协变量之后,与报告“非常相似”的配偶相比,报告配偶相似度较低的配偶与孤独感和认知障碍的风险较高相关。讨论:配偶相似度是一个重要的婚姻属性,可能会造成已婚人士之间的健康不平等。它与晚年较少的孤独感和认知障碍有关。配偶相似性的自我感知似乎比配偶双方评价的一致性/不一致性更能预测晚年幸福。
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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