Publication | Open Access
The association of increasing resilience with positive health outcomes among older adults
47
Citations
42
References
2022
Year
Quality Of LifeGeriatric PsychiatryResilience (Structural Engineering)AgingResilience (Community Psychology)Healthy AgingSocial HealthMidlife HealthResilience StrategiesHigh ResiliencePublic HealthHealth SciencesPsychiatryGeriatricsHealth PolicyPositive Health OutcomesDisaster ResilienceGlobal AgingMultilevel ModelingPsychological ResilienceProtective FactorsResilience AnalysisSystem ResilienceOlder AdultsHigh Resilience LevelsActive AgeingMedicineHealth System Resilience
Our objective was to investigate three levels of resilience (low, medium, and high), identify associated characteristics, and measure the impact of increasing resilience on quality of life (QOL), healthcare utilization and expenditures, and preventive services compliance. The study sample was identified from adults age ≥65 who completed surveys during May-June 2019 (N=3,573). Other protective factors, including purpose-in-life, optimism, locus of control, and social connections, were dichotomized as high/low and counted with equal weighting (0 to 4). Among survey respondents, the prevalence of low, medium, and high resilience levels was 27%, 29%, and 44%, respectively. The strongest predictors of medium and high resilience included increasing number of other protective factors, lower stress, and no depression. Individuals with medium and high resilience had significantly higher QOL and lower healthcare utilization and expenditures. Resilience strategies integrated into healthy aging programming could be associated with improvements in QOL and/or healthcare utilization and expenditure outcomes.
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