Primary and secondary control strategies for managing health and financial stress across adulthood.

C Wrosch, J Heckhausen, ME Lachman - Psychology and aging, 2000 - psycnet.apa.org
Psychology and aging, 2000psycnet.apa.org
The study examined the relation among three types of control strategies (persistence,
positive reappraisals, lowering aspirations) and subjective well-being across adulthood (N=
3,490). Specifically, the authors investigated whether age-adapted endorsement of control
strategies is conducive to subjective well-being if individuals experience health or financial
stress. The results reveal an overall enhanced reliance on control strategies in older as
compared with younger adults. In addition, persistence showed a stronger positive relation …
Abstract
The study examined the relation among three types of control strategies (persistence, positive reappraisals, lowering aspirations) and subjective well-being across adulthood (N= 3,490). Specifically, the authors investigated whether age-adapted endorsement of control strategies is conducive to subjective well-being if individuals experience health or financial stress. The results reveal an overall enhanced reliance on control strategies in older as compared with younger adults. In addition, persistence showed a stronger positive relation to subjective well-being in young adulthood as compared with old age. In midlife and old age, positive reappraisals had a stronger positive relation to subjective well-being than persistence. Lowering aspirations was negatively related to subjective well-being, independent of age. Age differences in the relation of control strategies to subjective well-being were particularly salient in individuals who faced either health or financial stress.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果