AbstractsPsychology

Attitudes to Ageing: Relationships with Health and Health Behaviours in Midlife

by Anna Marie Thorpe




Institution: University of Otago
Department:
Year: 0
Keywords: Attitudes to Ageing; health; health behaviours; midlife
Record ID: 1304714
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10523/5526


Abstract

There is growing pressure to understand and protect the health of the world’s ageing population. Despite projected rapid population ageing in New Zealand, limited attention has been given to attitudes towards ageing. Attitudes towards ageing are a complex, personalised perspective on the experience of ageing over the life span, which may be positively related to health and life expectancy. This doctoral study explores the relationships between attitudes to ageing and health and health behaviours at midlife, using a broad Awareness of Age-Related Change framework (Diehl & Wahl, 2010). Key constructs in the subjective ageing literature are identified as attitudes towards ageing, attitudes towards age stereotypes, subjective age, age identity, and self-perceptions of ageing. Attitudes towards ageing measures are critically discussed under these constructs. The study aims to compare attitudes to ageing with reported findings and to identify which health conditions and health behaviours are most associated with attitudes to ageing in midlife. Data was collected through the Canterbury Health, Ageing and Lifecourse (CHALICE) study, a longitudinal study of health and wellbeing at midlife in New Zealand. Two hundred CHALICE participants were recruited in their fiftieth year for detailed health assessments. A range of attitude to ageing measures were examined in relation to socio-demographic factors, mental and physical health, prevalent chronic conditions in New Zealand, depression, and a selection of health behaviours. Attitudes to ageing from this midlife sample were similar, or positive, compared to the literature. Participants reported feeling an average of ten years younger than their chronological age, with an ideal age of 17 years younger. Seventy percent of participants felt positive about the experience of ageing. In line with actuarial data, subjective life expectancy showed differences by gender: male participants expected to live to a mean 79.5 years, compared to 81.7 years for females. Positive attitudes to ageing were found using the Attitude to Ageing Questionnaire (AAQ) to psychosocial loss, physical change and psychological growth domains (Laidlaw, Power, Schmidt et al., 2007), compared to similar-aged samples. The physical change domain of the AAQ showed the greatest relationships to health and health behaviours. Negative physical change attitudes to ageing were significantly related to hypertension, heart disease, arthritis, asthma, depression, obesity, smoking and frequent visits to the general practitioner (GP). Negative psychosocial loss attitudes were related to high cholesterol and depression. Negative psychological growth attitudes to ageing were associated only with frequent GP visits, but this relationship ceased once socio-demographic and health factors were controlled. An apparent paradox was detected, in which relatively positive attitudes to ageing were assessed in all measures, but co-existed alongside significantly poorer mental health, higher depression and higher hazardous drinking…