Investigating Stress Sensitization and Steeling for Early-Life Adversity and Recent Stressful Life Experiences: Health and Illness in Older Adulthood

Author:

Thoma Myriam V.1ORCID,Balsiger Simona-Viktoria1,Höltge Jan23,Rohner Shauna L.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Zurich, Switzerland

2. Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada

3. University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA

4. OST-Eastern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences, St. Gallen, Switzerland

Abstract

Early-life adversity (ELA) and recent stress experiences are relevant explanatory factors in the understanding of health differences across the life span. However, their particular role in explaining the vast health heterogeneity in older adulthood has yet to be defined. To address this gap, this study examined (a) the health of older individuals with differing levels of ELA and recent stressful experiences; and (b) the type (i.e., linear, curvilinear) of the expected stress-health relationships. Longitudinal quantitative data were collected on health, ELA, and stressful life experiences of the previous 21 months in N = 216 participants ( Mage = 69.8 years, 45.8% female). Findings support linear (rather than curvilinear) stress-health relationships for ELA and recent stress with physical and mental health. Furthermore, ELA significantly moderated the relationship between recent stress and physical illnesses. As the detrimental health impact of ELA can still be detected in older adulthood, ELA may be critical for understanding later life health heterogeneity.

Funder

Postdoc.Mobility Scholarship from the Swiss National Science Foundation

Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship

University Research Priority Program (URPP) ‘Dynamics of Healthy Aging’ at the University of Zurich

Swiss National Science Foundation, National Research Program 76, “Welfare and Coercion – Past, Present and Future”

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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