Publication | Open Access
Late-life decline in well-being across adulthood in Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States: Something is seriously wrong at the end of life.
256
Citations
55
References
2010
Year
Quality Of LifeAgingUnited KingdomUnited StatesPsychologyPopulation AgingHealthy AgingLongevityMidlife HealthLifespan DevelopmentPublic HealthGerontologyHealth SciencesPrototypical Transition PointsPsychiatryGeriatricsAdult DevelopmentTerminal DeclineLifespan AgingElderly WellbeingLate-life DeclineDeceased ParticipantsSociologyLater AdulthoodMedicine
Throughout adulthood and old age, levels of well-being appear to remain relatively stable. However, evidence is emerging that late in life well-being declines considerably. Using long-term longitudinal data of deceased participants in national samples from Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States, we examined how long this period lasts. In all 3 nations and across the adult age range, well-being was relatively stable over age but declined rapidly with impending death. Articulating notions of terminal decline associated with impending death, we identified prototypical transition points in each study between 3 and 5 years prior to death, after which normative rates of decline steepened by a factor of 3 or more. The findings suggest that mortality-related mechanisms drive late-life changes in well-being and highlight the need for further refinement of psychological concepts about how and when late-life declines in psychosocial functioning prototypically begin. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
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