Sundström Gerdt, Fransson Eleonor, Malmberg Bo, Davey Adam
Institute of Gerontology, School of Health Sciences, Jönköping University, Box 1026, 55111 Jönköping, Sweden.
College of Health Professions, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA USA.
Eur J Ageing. 2009 Nov 6;6(4):267. doi: 10.1007/s10433-009-0134-8. eCollection 2009 Dec.
More than two decades of research has consistently indicated that feelings of loneliness among older people are more common in southern Europe than in its northern parts, with the lowest rates in Denmark and Sweden. Our analyses based on analysis of 2004-2006 data from 8,787 individuals aged 65 years or older in the SHARE project replicate, update, and extend these findings. We found, similar to previous studies, that the prevalence of feelings of loneliness was more common in the Mediterranean countries than in Northern Europe. Living together with a spouse/partner was consistently associated with the lower prevalence of loneliness across countries. The combination of living alone and having bad health was associated with 10 times higher odds of feeling lonely as compared with living together with someone and having good health. With regard to gender and health, we found signs of differences between countries in how these factors were related to loneliness. Our results indicate the importance of both contextual features and cultural expectations in interpreting reported loneliness, that is, loneliness across Europe has both nomothetic and idiographic features.
二十多年来的研究一直表明,在欧洲南部,老年人的孤独感比北部更为普遍,丹麦和瑞典的孤独感发生率最低。我们基于对“健康、退休和老龄化调查”(SHARE)项目中8787名65岁及以上个体2004 - 2006年数据的分析进行了重复、更新和扩展这些发现。我们发现,与之前的研究类似,在地中海国家,孤独感的患病率高于北欧。在各个国家,与配偶/伴侣同住一直与较低的孤独感患病率相关。与有人同住且健康状况良好相比,独居且健康状况不佳会使感到孤独的几率高出10倍。关于性别和健康,我们发现各国在这些因素与孤独感的关联方式上存在差异迹象。我们的结果表明,背景特征和文化期望在解释所报告的孤独感方面都很重要,也就是说,整个欧洲的孤独感既有普遍性特征,也有独特性特征。