Coping and uncertainty in the context of covid-19: differences between partnered and unpartnered older adults

Innovation in Aging(2022)

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摘要
Abstract The initial conditions of the COVID-19 pandemic made it such that individuals—especially older adults—experienced uncertainty about their own health/well-being, as well as that of their loved ones and communities. The current study examined how older adults’ social context shaped their well-being (i.e., anxiety, depressive symptoms, and sleep quality) early in the pandemic. Specifically, we tested whether there were differences in uncertainty, communal coping, and well-being among partnered individuals who indicated that their partner was their primary source of emotional support during the pandemic versus un-partnered individuals who indicated another social tie as their primary source of emotional support. Data were collected between May and August 2020 from 101 older adults (Mage = 80.63, SD = 8.96). Correlational analyses showed that uncertainty about one’s own health/well-being was positively associated with anxiety (p < .05) and communal coping (i.e., viewing the pandemic as a stressful period that will be worked through together) was negatively associated with depressive symptoms (p = .001) and anxiety (p < .01). Results from independent samples t-tests showed that, on average, partnered older adults reported fewer depressive symptoms (p < .05), less uncertainty about their own health/well-being (p < .05), and higher communal coping (p < .001) compared to un-partnered older adults. Unexpectedly, no group differences were found for anxiety or sleep quality. Results suggest the unique benefit of having a partner as an emotional support confidant in the context of the pandemic, perhaps because older adults were largely confined to their homes during lockdown.
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coping,older adults,uncertainty
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