Curtis Rachel G, Windsor Tim D, Mogle Jacqueline A, Bielak Allison A M
School of Psychology, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, S.A., Australia.
Gerontology. 2017;63(2):157-168. doi: 10.1159/000450786. Epub 2016 Oct 19.
Participation in activities is associated with a range of positive outcomes in adulthood. Research has shown that pain and physical symptoms are associated with less activity in older adults, whereas higher self-efficacy is associated with more activity. Such research tends to examine cross-sectional or long-term between-person change, limiting the opportunity to explore dynamic within-person processes that unfold over shorter time periods.
This study aimed to (1) replicate previous between-person associations of self-efficacy with engagement in activity and (2) examine whether daily variation in pain, physical symptoms, and self-efficacy corresponded with daily within-person variation in different types of activity. We predicted that participants would engage in less activity on days when they experienced more pain or physical symptoms than their average (a negative within-person association) and that participants would engage in more activity on days when self-efficacy was higher than average (a positive within-person association).
This study used an online diary study to assess self- reported daily pain, physical symptoms, self-efficacy, and engagement in activity among 185 adults aged 51-84 years for up to 7 days. Multilevel modelling was used to examine whether between-person (average) and daily within-person variability in pain, physical symptoms, and self-efficacy were associated with social, physical, and mental activity.
In line with previous research, between-person self-efficacy was positively associated with social and physical activity. Supporting the hypotheses, within-person self-efficacy was also positively associated with social and physical activity. The results for pain and physical symptoms were less consistent. Between-person pain was positively associated with social activity. Age interactions indicated that within-person pain was negatively associated with social activity and positively associated with physical activity among older adults. Within-person physical symptoms were positively related to social and mental activity.
Stable individual differences as well as short-term within-person variation in physical and psychological functioning are associated with day-to-day variation in activity. Between-person associations did not always reflect within-person associations (e.g., for pain). These complex associations may be influenced by a range of factors including the type of activity and how it is defined (e.g., specific activities and their difficulty), the type of physical symptoms experienced, and age.
参与活动与成年期一系列积极结果相关。研究表明,疼痛和身体症状与老年人活动量减少有关,而较高的自我效能感与更多活动相关。此类研究倾向于考察横断面或长期的个体间变化,限制了探索在较短时间段内展开的动态个体内过程的机会。
本研究旨在(1)重复先前自我效能感与活动参与之间的个体间关联,以及(2)检验疼痛、身体症状和自我效能感的每日变化是否与不同类型活动的每日个体内变化相对应。我们预测,当参与者经历的疼痛或身体症状多于其平均水平时,他们参与的活动会减少(个体内负相关),而当自我效能感高于平均水平时,参与者会参与更多活动(个体内正相关)。
本研究采用在线日记研究,对185名年龄在51 - 84岁的成年人进行了长达7天的自我报告每日疼痛、身体症状、自我效能感和活动参与情况的评估。采用多水平模型来检验疼痛、身体症状和自我效能感的个体间(平均)和每日个体内变异性是否与社交、身体和心理活动相关。
与先前研究一致,个体间自我效能感与社交和身体活动呈正相关。支持假设的是,个体内自我效能感也与社交和身体活动呈正相关。疼痛和身体症状的结果不太一致。个体间疼痛与社交活动呈正相关。年龄交互作用表明,个体内疼痛与社交活动呈负相关,而在老年人中与身体活动呈正相关。个体内身体症状与社交和心理活动呈正相关。
身体和心理功能的稳定个体差异以及短期个体内变化与活动的每日变化相关。个体间关联并不总是反映个体内关联(例如,对于疼痛)。这些复杂的关联可能受到一系列因素的影响,包括活动类型及其定义方式(例如,特定活动及其难度)、所经历的身体症状类型以及年龄。