Kate M Bennett1. 1. School of Psychology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. kmb@liv.ac.uk
Abstract
AIM: The study examined cross-sectionally and longitudinally psychological wellbeing in the context of marital status, gender, and age. METHOD: Measures were taken eight years apart for three groups: married at both interviews; widowed at both interviews; and married at first interview but widowed at third. Data were analysed using multiple regression models: dependent variables were morale and social engagement; independent variables were marital status, gender and age. RESULTS: Cross-sectionally significant differences were found for marital status and age for both morale and social engagement. Both widowed and newly widowed participants reported lower morale and social engagement than their married counterparts. In the longitudinal model, when prior levels of morale were taken into account, only age and being newly widowed contributed significantly to the variance (R2). The same pattern of results was found for social engagement. Gender was never significant. CONCLUSION: The results illustrate the value of modelling both cross-sectional and longitudinal data. The latter demonstrated that the size of the effect differed between those who had recently widowed and those who had been widowed for longer. The study shows that age needs to be taken into account when examining widowhood.
AIM: The study examined cross-sectionally and longitudinally psychological wellbeing in the context of marital status, gender, and age. METHOD: Measures were taken eight years apart for three groups: married at both interviews; widowed at both interviews; and married at first interview but widowed at third. Data were analysed using multiple regression models: dependent variables were morale and social engagement; independent variables were marital status, gender and age. RESULTS: Cross-sectionally significant differences were found for marital status and age for both morale and social engagement. Both widowed and newly widowed participants reported lower morale and social engagement than their married counterparts. In the longitudinal model, when prior levels of morale were taken into account, only age and being newly widowed contributed significantly to the variance (R2). The same pattern of results was found for social engagement. Gender was never significant. CONCLUSION: The results illustrate the value of modelling both cross-sectional and longitudinal data. The latter demonstrated that the size of the effect differed between those who had recently widowed and those who had been widowed for longer. The study shows that age needs to be taken into account when examining widowhood.
Authors: Linda J Waite; Edward O Laumann; Aniruddha Das; L Philip Schumm Journal: J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci Date: 2009-06-04 Impact factor: 4.077
Authors: Jessica M Perkins; Hwa-Young Lee; K S James; Juhwan Oh; Aditi Krishna; Jongho Heo; Jong-Koo Lee; S V Subramanian Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2016-09-30 Impact factor: 3.295