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The Relationships of Coping Responses to Physical Health Status and Life Satisfaction Among Older Women
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1988
Year
NursingQuality Of LifeFamily MedicinePhysical HealthLife SatisfactionAgingPsychiatryHealthy AgingGeriatricsPhysical Health StatusMidlife HealthHealth BehaviorSubjective ComponentsCoping ResponsesPublic HealthMedicinePsychologyElderly Wellbeing
This study examined a model specifying the causal links between the physical, functional, and subjective components of physical health status and life satisfaction among older women, and assessed the effects of three coping responses (direct-action, positive-cognitive, and passive-cognitive coping) at each point in the process. Based on interview data with 281 older women, a series of regression analyses indicated that, before the inclusion of the coping variables, physical conditions directly contributed to functional impairment, and both indirectly lowered life satisfaction through their direct negative effects on subjective health assessments. Further analyses indicated that positive-cognitive coping buffered the effects of physical conditions at each point in the model, that passive-cognitive coping generally had deleterious effects on health status, although it prevented negative health assessments from lowering life satisfaction, and that direct-action coping had little effect. These findings emphasize the importance of a multidimensional conceptualization of physical health status in understanding its relationship with life satisfaction as well as the specific functions of coping at different points in the process for older women.