Schnittker Jason
University of Pennsylvania, Department of Sociology, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6299, USA.
J Aging Health. 2007 Aug;19(4):659-82. doi: 10.1177/0898264307301178.
This article explores the relationship between age and social support. Previous research on the relationship has reached inconsistent conclusions.
Three theories are tested using the Americans' Changing Lives survey.
The likelihood of reporting no close friends or confidants increases with age, and role changes (such as the growing likelihood of living alone) account for much of this increase. Yet these cases are exceptional, and in general, the number of friends and confidants stays the same. Moreover, evaluations of support become more positive with age, and loneliness declines.
Improvements in perceived support appear to be premised on psychological processes rather than role changes: They occur despite changes in the environment and independent of how individuals make choices among friends. Indeed, this process is so powerful that loneliness declines even among those who are living alone, have no children, and report no confidants.
本文探讨年龄与社会支持之间的关系。先前关于这一关系的研究得出了不一致的结论。
使用“美国人生活变化”调查对三种理论进行检验。
报告没有亲密朋友或知己的可能性随年龄增长而增加,角色变化(如独居可能性增加)在很大程度上导致了这种增加。然而,这些情况是例外,总体而言,朋友和知己的数量保持不变。此外,对支持的评价随年龄增长变得更加积极,孤独感下降。
感知到的支持的改善似乎基于心理过程而非角色变化:尽管环境发生变化且与个体如何在朋友中做出选择无关,但这些改善仍会出现。事实上,这一过程非常强大,以至于即使是那些独居、没有孩子且没有知己的人,孤独感也会下降。