An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals

Researchers have struggled to define how to age well since the time of Roman philosopher Cicero in 44 BC, yet today it remains a mystery (Tate, Lah, & Cuddy, 2003). In the context of dealing with age-related declines that often accompany later life, it has recently been suggested that positive r...

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Main Author: Swift, Audrey U A A
Other Authors: Chipperfield, Judith (Psychology)
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4345
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-43452014-01-31T03:32:15Z An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals Swift, Audrey U A A Chipperfield, Judith (Psychology) Bailis, Dan (Psychology) Menec, Verena (Community Health Sciences) Degner, Lesley (Nursing) Konnert, Candace (University of Calgary) secondary control positive reinterpretation interpretive control aging psychological adjustment acceptance perceived control coping positive psychology Researchers have struggled to define how to age well since the time of Roman philosopher Cicero in 44 BC, yet today it remains a mystery (Tate, Lah, & Cuddy, 2003). In the context of dealing with age-related declines that often accompany later life, it has recently been suggested that positive reinterpretation, a concept implicit to positive psychology, may be important (Ouwehand, de Ridder, & Bensing, 2007; Seligman & Csikszentmihalyi, 2000). Positive reinterpretation has at times been referred to as “secondary control” in the psychological literature. In their seminal article of 1982, Rothbaum, Weisz, and Snyder theorized that there were multiple ways in which people could positively reinterpret outcomes and gain feelings of secondary control, including believing in the power of others and nature, as well as downgrading importance. These belief patterns become especially important in later life, when faced with age-related challenges. In the present study, secondary control beliefs were examined cross-sectionally in 2003 (n = 223) and prospectively in 2006 (n = 117) in a sample of older adults (M age = 85 years, 62% women) using a variety of outcome measures including severity of chronic conditions score, recent health, self-rated health, positive emotion, life satisfaction, and perceived stress. The unique contributions of this study are twofold. First, the findings suggest that some older adults may emphasize certain secondary control beliefs in combination. Second, the combined beliefs were found to relate cross-sectionally to measures of physical and psychological well-being. These exploratory findings have important implications in applied and theoretical contexts. In applied contexts, they may help to enhance physical and psychological well-being in the very old. In theoretical contexts, they extend contemporary thinking on secondary control. 2011-01-14T21:03:38Z 2011-01-14T21:03:38Z 2011-01-14T21:03:38Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4345 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic secondary control
positive reinterpretation
interpretive control
aging
psychological adjustment
acceptance
perceived control
coping
positive psychology
spellingShingle secondary control
positive reinterpretation
interpretive control
aging
psychological adjustment
acceptance
perceived control
coping
positive psychology
Swift, Audrey U A A
An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
description Researchers have struggled to define how to age well since the time of Roman philosopher Cicero in 44 BC, yet today it remains a mystery (Tate, Lah, & Cuddy, 2003). In the context of dealing with age-related declines that often accompany later life, it has recently been suggested that positive reinterpretation, a concept implicit to positive psychology, may be important (Ouwehand, de Ridder, & Bensing, 2007; Seligman & Csikszentmihalyi, 2000). Positive reinterpretation has at times been referred to as “secondary control” in the psychological literature. In their seminal article of 1982, Rothbaum, Weisz, and Snyder theorized that there were multiple ways in which people could positively reinterpret outcomes and gain feelings of secondary control, including believing in the power of others and nature, as well as downgrading importance. These belief patterns become especially important in later life, when faced with age-related challenges. In the present study, secondary control beliefs were examined cross-sectionally in 2003 (n = 223) and prospectively in 2006 (n = 117) in a sample of older adults (M age = 85 years, 62% women) using a variety of outcome measures including severity of chronic conditions score, recent health, self-rated health, positive emotion, life satisfaction, and perceived stress. The unique contributions of this study are twofold. First, the findings suggest that some older adults may emphasize certain secondary control beliefs in combination. Second, the combined beliefs were found to relate cross-sectionally to measures of physical and psychological well-being. These exploratory findings have important implications in applied and theoretical contexts. In applied contexts, they may help to enhance physical and psychological well-being in the very old. In theoretical contexts, they extend contemporary thinking on secondary control.
author2 Chipperfield, Judith (Psychology)
author_facet Chipperfield, Judith (Psychology)
Swift, Audrey U A A
author Swift, Audrey U A A
author_sort Swift, Audrey U A A
title An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
title_short An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
title_full An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
title_fullStr An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
title_sort analysis of secondary control beliefs and physical and psychological well-being in older individuals
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4345
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