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Subjective quality of life, perceived control and dispositional optimism among older people

journal contribution
posted on 2001-09-01, 00:00 authored by E Maher, Robert CumminsRobert Cummins
Objectives: To examine whether the subjective quality of life (QOL) of elderly people is held under homeostatic control, and to investigate the role of perceived control and dispositional optimism in the maintenance of subjective QOL.
Method: 100 older people (M=75.6 years) and a control group of 107 younger people (M=20.1 years) completed a self-report survey.
Results: Both groups had a level of subjective QOL within the normal range. The older group reported higher levels of secondary control and optimism, but similar levels of primary control, as the younger group. Primary control and optimism predicted subjective QOL for both groups. Secondary control was a significant predictor (or the younger group, however it was only marginally significant for the older group. Optimism accounted for the most subjective QOL variance for both groups.
Conclusions: The finding that the subjective QOL of the older group lay within the normative range supports the proposal that their subjective QOL is being successfully maintained under bomeostatic control. However, they appear to have an increased reliance on secondary control. The fact that dispositional optimism captures the predictive variance of perceived control, is an important finding adding to the understanding of subjective QOL maintenance.

History

Journal

Australasian journal on ageing

Volume

20

Issue

3

Pagination

139 - 146

Publisher

Council on the Ageing

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

1440-6381

eISSN

1741-6612

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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