Adams K B, Sanders S, Auth E A
Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Aging Ment Health. 2004 Nov;8(6):475-85. doi: 10.1080/13607860410001725054.
Socio-emotional selectivity theory posits that as individuals age, they desire less social stimulation and novelty, and tend to select close, reliable relationships to meet their emotional needs. Residence in congregate facilities affords social exposure, yet does not guarantee access to close relationships, so that loneliness may be a result. Further, the gerontology literature has suggested that loneliness in late life may be a risk factor for serious mental health concerns such as depression. This article examined data on loneliness and depressive symptoms from older adults aged 60-98, residing in two age-segregated independent living facilities. Overlap between those scoring in the depressed range on the Geriatric Depression Scale and those scoring more than one standard deviation above the mean on the UCLA Loneliness Scale was less than 50%, although zero-order correlation of the two continuous scores was moderately high. Potential risk and resilience factors were regressed on the continuous scores of the two scales in separate hierarchical multiple regression analyses. Depression was predicted by being older, number of chronic health conditions, grieving a recent loss, fewer neighbor visitors, less participation in organized social activities and less church attendance. Grieving a recent loss, receiving fewer visits from friends, and having a less extensive social network predicted loneliness. In addition, loneliness scores explained about 8% of the unique variance in depression scores, suggesting it is an independent risk factor for depressive symptoms. Loneliness scores were seen to be more widely dispersed in these respondents, with less variance explained by the available predictors. Suggestions are made for addressing loneliness in older adults as a means of preventing more serious mental health consequences.
社会情感选择性理论认为,随着个体年龄的增长,他们对社交刺激和新奇事物的需求减少,倾向于选择亲密、可靠的关系来满足情感需求。居住在集体设施中提供了社交机会,但并不能保证获得亲密关系,因此可能会导致孤独感。此外,老年学文献表明,晚年的孤独感可能是诸如抑郁症等严重心理健康问题的一个风险因素。本文研究了居住在两个按年龄划分的独立生活设施中的60 - 98岁老年人的孤独感和抑郁症状数据。在老年抑郁量表上得分处于抑郁范围的人群与在加州大学洛杉矶分校孤独量表上得分高于平均水平一个标准差以上的人群之间的重叠率不到50%,尽管这两个连续得分的零阶相关性中等偏高。在单独的分层多元回归分析中,将潜在的风险和恢复力因素对两个量表的连续得分进行回归分析。年龄较大、患有慢性健康问题的数量、为近期的损失而悲伤、邻居访客较少、参与有组织的社交活动较少以及去教堂的次数较少,这些因素可以预测抑郁。为近期的损失而悲伤、朋友来访较少以及社交网络较窄,可以预测孤独感。此外,孤独感得分解释了抑郁得分中约8%的独特方差,表明它是抑郁症状的一个独立风险因素。在这些受访者中,孤独感得分的分布更为广泛,可用预测因素解释的方差较少。文章针对解决老年人的孤独感提出了建议,以此作为预防更严重心理健康后果的一种手段。