老年人孤独感轨迹的历史变化:今天的老年人不再那么孤独,但他们的年龄轨迹并无不同。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Bianca Suanet, Johanna Drewelies, Sandra Duezel, Peter Eibich, Ilja Demuth, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Gert G Wagner, Ulman Lindenberger, Nilam Ram, Paolo Ghisletta, Denis Gerstorf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了验证 "孤独流行病 "的说法,我们研究了目前的老年人群是否比早年出生的同龄人报告了更高水平的孤独感和/或与年龄相关的更陡峭的孤独感增长。具体来说,我们使用了 1990 年和 2010 年在德国柏林市招募的独立样本提供的 1068 份年龄匹配的孤独感纵向报告(观察年龄 = 79 岁,49% 为女性),其中包括柏林老龄化研究(BASE)的 257 名参与者和柏林老龄化研究 II(BASE-II)的 383 名参与者。我们使用将人与人之间和人与人之间的年龄效应正交化的多层次模型,研究了观察匹配组群对加州大学洛杉矶分校孤独感量表项目的反应随年龄和不同组群之间有何差异,以及这些差异是否可由各种个体因素解释。结果显示,在 79 岁时,较晚出生的 BASE-II 组群报告的孤独感水平大大低于较早出生的 BASE 组群(d = -0.84),组群差异占孤独感差异的 14% 以上。然而,年龄轨迹是平行的,没有证据表明在与孤独感年龄相关的变化率方面存在队列差异。性别、教育程度、认知功能和外部控制信念的差异占孤独感水平队列相关差异的绝大部分。研究结果表明,如今老年人的孤独感已明显降低,但孤独感随年龄增长的速度与二十年前类似。未来的研究应该调查在不同的社会历史背景下,以及在其他年龄段,如年轻人和中年人中,整个生命过程中的社会心理功能是如何发展的。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Historical change in trajectories of loneliness in old age: Older adults today are less lonely, but do not differ in their age trajectories.

To check claims of a "loneliness epidemic," we examined whether current cohorts of older adults report higher levels and/or steeper age-related increases in loneliness than earlier-born peers. Specifically, we used 1,068 age-matched longitudinal reports (Mage observations = 79 years, 49% women) of loneliness provided by independent samples recruited in the German city of Berlin in 1990 and 2010, n = 257 participants in the Berlin Aging Study (BASE) and n = 383 participants in Berlin Aging Study II (BASE-II). Using multilevel models that orthogonalize between-person and within-person age effects, we examined how responses to items from the UCLA Loneliness Scale provided by observation-matched cohorts differed with age and across cohorts, and if those differences might be explained by a variety of individual factors. Results revealed that at age 79, the later-born BASE-II cohort reported substantially lower levels of loneliness than the earlier-born BASE cohort (d = -0.84), with cohort differences accounting for more than 14% of the variance in loneliness. Age trajectories, however, were parallel without evidence of cohort differences in rates of within-person age-related changes in loneliness. Differences in gender, education, cognitive functioning, and external control beliefs accounted for the lion's share of cohort-related differences in levels of loneliness. Results show that loneliness among older adults has shifted to markedly lower levels today, but the rate at which loneliness increases with age proceeds similarly as 2 decades ago. Future studies should investigate how psychosocial functioning across the life course is progressing in different sociohistorical contexts and in other age groups, such as younger and middle-aged adults. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
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