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Sex comparisons in life satisfaction and psychosocial adjustment scores with an older adult sample: examining the effect of sex role differences in older cohorts
Author(s)Lisa A Hollis
Journal titleJournal of Women & Aging, vol 10, no 3, 1998
Pagespp 59-77
Sourcehttp://www.tandfonline.com
KeywordsLife satisfaction ; Adjustment ; Social roles ; Older men ; Older women ; United States of America.
AnnotationThis study examined how sex and other individual-difference factors such as age level, locus of control orientation, and self-actualisation subscores, relate to older adults' scores on life satisfaction and psychosocial adjustment. Seventy-eight older men and women were recruited from independent-living retirement communities in Pennsylvania, US. Results indicated that women in the sample were not significantly different in mean life satisfaction scores but were significantly lower in mean psychosocial adjustment scores than men in the sample. There were no significant age-level differences in mean scores. Qualitative data from unstructured post-testing interviews revealed that women were more likely to express regret and sometimes frustration toward perceived "missed opportunities" in life (e.g., career) due to expected social roles of being a wife and mother in the decades ranging from the 1920s through the 1960s; these feelings of regret or frustration were not expressed by any of the males in the study. (AKM).
Accession NumberCPA-980810405 A
ClassmarkF:5HH: DR: TM5: BC: BD: 7T

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