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Volunteering and trajectories of depression
Author(s)Joongbaeck Kim, Manacy Pai
Journal titleJournal of Aging and Health, vol 22, no 1, February 2010
Pagespp 84-105
Sourcehttp://jah.sagepub.com/ DOI: 10.1177/0898264309351310
KeywordsVoluntary work [elderly] ; Voluntary workers ; Depression ; Correlation ; Longitudinal surveys ; United States of America.
AnnotationThe purpose of this study was twofold: (1) to examine the association between volunteering and trajectories of depression; and (2) to evaluate whether this relationship varies by age. Data comes from three waves of the Americans' Changing Lives (ACL) study. ACL is a nationally representative sample of adults 25 years of age or older who lived in the United States. Latent growth model analysis indicates that although volunteering is associated with lower levels of baseline depression, it does not predict trajectories of depression. Nevertheless, further analyses reveal an age variation in the relationship between volunteering and trajectories of depression. Specifically, it was found that volunteering affects the decline of depression for individuals above age 65; yet there is no effect of volunteering on trajectories of depression for younger and middle-aged adults. Overall findings highlight the importance of assessing the long-term health impact of volunteering and doing so under diverse social structural contexts. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-100414603 A
ClassmarkGHH: QV: ENR: 49: 3J: 7T

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