Moos Rudolf H, Brennan Penny L, Schutte Kathleen K, Moos Bernice S
Department of Veterans Affairs and Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Int J Aging Hum Dev. 2006;62(1):39-59. doi: 10.2190/ENLH-WAA2-AX8J-WRT1.
This study examined how older adults cope with negative life events in health, interpersonal, and financial/work domains and whether common stress and coping processes hold across these three domains. On three occasions, older adults identified the most severe negative event they faced in the last year and described how they appraised and coped with that event, their ambient chronic stressors, and event and functioning outcomes. The stress and coping process was largely consistent across the three life domains. Individuals who appraised events as challenging and relied more on approach coping were more likely to report some benefit from those events. Individuals who experienced more chronic stressors and favored avoidance coping were more likely to be depressed and to have late-life drinking problems. Chronic stressors, as well as approach and avoidance coping, were predictably associated with overall outcomes in all three event domains. These findings provide a basis for preventive interventions that may help older adults' address the most prevalent stressors of aging more effectively.
本研究考察了老年人如何应对健康、人际关系以及财务/工作领域的负面生活事件,以及常见的压力和应对过程在这三个领域是否一致。老年人在三个时间点上指出了他们在过去一年中面临的最严重负面事件,并描述了他们如何评估和应对该事件、周围的慢性压力源以及事件和功能结果。压力和应对过程在三个生活领域中基本一致。将事件评估为具有挑战性且更多依赖积极应对方式的个体,更有可能报告从这些事件中获得了一些益处。经历更多慢性压力源且倾向于回避应对的个体,更有可能出现抑郁和晚年饮酒问题。慢性压力源以及积极和回避应对方式,不出所料地与所有三个事件领域的总体结果相关。这些发现为预防性干预措施提供了依据,这些措施可能有助于老年人更有效地应对衰老过程中最普遍的压力源。