Fry P S
Graduate Program in Psychology, Trinity Western University, Langley, British Columbia, Canada.
Psychol Aging. 2003 Sep;18(3):474-86. doi: 10.1037/0882-7974.18.3.474.
Using a sample of 167 women and 121 men, aged 65-87, this study tested the hypothesis that self-efficacy beliefs of older persons are significantly stronger predictors of death fears than are demographics, social support, and physical health variables used in earlier predictor models. Standard self-report measures were used to assess all predictor variables, including perceived self-efficacy in 8 different domains. Findings from a series of hierarchical regression analyses that were conducted separately for men and women supported the hypothesis concerning the superiority of self-efficacy variables as predictors of fear of the unknown after death and fear of dying, with spiritual health efficacy and instrumental efficacy being the most potent predictors of death fears for women and men, respectively.
本研究以167名65至87岁的女性和121名同龄男性为样本,检验了以下假设:与早期预测模型中使用的人口统计学、社会支持和身体健康变量相比,老年人的自我效能信念是死亡恐惧更强有力的预测指标。使用标准的自我报告测量方法来评估所有预测变量,包括在8个不同领域的自我效能感。分别对男性和女性进行的一系列分层回归分析结果支持了这一假设,即自我效能变量作为死后对未知的恐惧和对死亡的恐惧的预测指标具有优越性,精神健康效能和工具效能分别是女性和男性死亡恐惧的最有力预测指标。