| Literature DB >> 25632173 |
Luciana Laganá1, Therese Spellman1, Jennifer Wakefield1, Taylor Oliver1.
Abstract
The authors investigated the relationship between marital adjustment and ethnic minority status, depressive symptomatology, and cognitive failures among 78 married, community-dwelling, and predominantly non-European-American older women (ages 57-89). Respondents were screened to rule out dementia. Level of depressive symptoms, self-report of cognitive failures, and marital adjustment were obtained. As hypothesized, higher depressive symptomatology and cognitive failures were associated with worse marital adjustment (p < .05 for both). The same was true for membership in a non-dominant ethnic group, albeit only when ethnic status was considered outside the context of the other two independent variables. These results have clinical implications and fit within the theoretical framework of the socioemotional selectivity theory (Carstensen, 1992) applied to marriage in older age, a conceptualization formulated by Bookwala and Jacobs in 2004.Entities:
Keywords: Relationship satisfaction; cognitive complaints; mood symptomatology; race
Year: 2011 PMID: 25632173 PMCID: PMC4306575 DOI: 10.1080/07317115.2011.554627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Gerontol ISSN: 0731-7115 Impact factor: 2.619