Abstract

BackgroundAlthough empirical evidence is available on the coping-health link in older age, research on this topic is needed with non-clinical samples of ethnically diverse older women. To contribute to filling such a research gap, we tested whether these women's general health and functional limitations were associated with specific coping strategies (selected for their particular relevance to health issues) and with known health-related demographics, i.e., age, ethnicity, income, and married status.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study, respondents were recruited at community facilities including stores and senior centers. The sample consisted of 180 community-dwelling women (age 52-98) screened for dementia; 64% of them reported having an ethnic minority status. The assessment battery contained the Mini-Cog, a demographics list, the Brief COPE, and the Medical Outcome Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey.ResultsHierarchical multiple regression analyses showed that older women who used behavioral disengagement and, to a smaller degree, self-distraction as a form of coping reported lower levels of general health. The opposite was the case for positive reframing and, to a lesser degree, substance use. Moreover, lower income was related to worse general health and (together with more advanced age) physical functioning. None of the coping strategies achieved significance in the physical functioning model.ConclusionsThese cross-sectional findings need corroboration by longitudinal research prior to developing related clinical interventions. Based on the initial evidence provided herein, clinicians working with this population should consider establishing the therapeutic goal of increasing the use of positive reframing while diminishing behavioral disengagement.

Highlights

  • Empirical evidence is available on the coping-health link in older age, research on this topic is needed with non-clinical samples of ethnically diverse older women

  • The overall regression model accounted for a significant portion of variance in scores on physical functioning (Adjusted R2 = .12). In this cross-sectional study, we discovered that a variety of emotion-focused coping strategies were significantly related to general health

  • Our results regarding emotion-focused coping strategies that are related to general health could be adequately explained using Lazarus and Folkman's conceptualization of the potentially deleterious effects of certain coping strategies on somatic health status [8]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Empirical evidence is available on the coping-health link in older age, research on this topic is needed with non-clinical samples of ethnically diverse older women. Plus the risk of cancer, as well as heart and lung disease, all increase as women grow older, often exceeding the numbers presented by older men [2]. Accounting for key demographics, geriatric researchers should investigate whether health outcomes in older age are linked to coping strategies potentially amenable to change via clinical interventions. This is a neglected research subject with regard to nonclinical samples of ethnically diverse older women. We used the words "worse physical functioning" and "functional/physical limitations" interchangeably

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call