DOES RESILIENCE OR SES PREDICT OLDER ADULTS FINDING A SILVER LINING DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC?
The COVID-19 pandemic has stretched our limits physically, mentally, and economically; however, some older adults report that it led to a positive life change. We used data from the NSHAP COVID-19 supplement to understand whether resilience and SES (both measured in 2015-16) are predictors of older...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Innovation in aging 2022-12, Vol.6 (Supplement_1), p.32-32 |
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description | The COVID-19 pandemic has stretched our limits physically, mentally, and economically; however, some older adults report that it led to a positive life change. We used data from the NSHAP COVID-19 supplement to understand whether resilience and SES (both measured in 2015-16) are predictors of older adults’ likelihood of endorsing a positive change during the pandemic. Additionally, we examined whether resilience and SES predict specific positive changes described in open-ended responses. Higher education significantly predicted reporting a positive change during the pandemic. Adjusting for resilience (OR 1.0, p= 0.185), the odds of endorsing any positive change were 1.9 times higher for those with an associate degree (p=0.027) and 3.3 times higher for those with a bachelor’s degree or higher (p |
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title | DOES RESILIENCE OR SES PREDICT OLDER ADULTS FINDING A SILVER LINING DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC? |
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