Day-to-Day Variability in Subjective Age and Ageist Attitudes and Their Association With Depressive Symptoms

Author:

Bodner Ehud1ORCID,Shrira Amit2ORCID,Hoffman Yaakov2ORCID,Bergman Yoav S3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Interdisciplinary Department of Social Sciences and the Department of Music, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel

2. Interdisciplinary Department of Social Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel

3. Faculty of Social Work, Ashkelon Academic College, Israel

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Evidence of daily fluctuations in subjective age and their association with older adults’ well-being was recently obtained. Yet, neither the simultaneous tracking of two daily views on aging (i.e., daily subjective age and daily ageist attitudes) nor their interactive effect on mental health (i.e., depressive symptoms) has been explored. We hypothesized that (a) at days on which older adults feel older or report high ageist attitudes they would report higher depressive symptoms, (b) combined older subjective age and high ageist attitudes will be associated with the highest daily depressive symptoms. Method Community-dwelling older adults (N = 134, mean age = 69.66) completed measures of subjective age, ageist attitudes, and depressive symptoms for 10 consecutive days. Results Daily older subjective age and higher ageist attitudes were related to higher depressive symptoms, but there was no combined effect of both on depressive symptoms. There was a significant three-way interaction between subjective age, ageist attitudes, and chronological age, demonstrating the interactive effect of subjective age and ageist attitudes on depressive symptoms only among the old-old respondents. Time-lagged analyses further showed that ageist attitudes during previous days predicted feeling older and more depressed on following days, but not vice versa. Discussion Results suggest that old-old individuals are more susceptible to a combination of negative views on aging on daily basis. Findings further support a daily assimilation process, whereby previous-day stereotypes are assimilated and manifested into one’s identity and mental health, so that one feels older and more depressed on subsequent days.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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