Publication | Closed Access
Primary and secondary control strategies for managing health and financial stress across adulthood.
253
Citations
40
References
2000
Year
Family MedicineQuality Of LifeSecondary Control StrategiesMental HealthPositive ReappraisalsSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyStressMidlife HealthPublic HealthPsychological Well-beingStress ManagementBehavioral SciencesHealth PolicyAdult Behavioral HealthPsychosocial FactorFinancial WellbeingSocial StressFinancial StressLife SatisfactionSubjective Well-beingHealth BehaviorAdult Mental HealthLater AdulthoodControl Strategies
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.
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