Healthy Aging-Relevant Goals: The Role of Person–Context Co-construction

Abstract Objectives This article considers how individuals’ motivation for healthy aging manifests within the myriad of different contexts that older adults are embedded in as they move through later life. Methods Drawing on the concept of co-construction, we argue that persons and contexts both con...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences Psychological sciences and social sciences, 2021-09, Vol.76 (Supplement_2), p.S181-S190
Hauptverfasser: Wahl, Hans-Werner, Hoppmann, Christiane A, Ram, Nilam, Gerstorf, Denis
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Objectives This article considers how individuals’ motivation for healthy aging manifests within the myriad of different contexts that older adults are embedded in as they move through later life. Methods Drawing on the concept of co-construction, we argue that persons and contexts both contribute to the emergence, maintenance, and disengagement from healthy aging relevant goals in adulthood and old age. Results To promote the understanding of such co-constructive dynamics, we propose four conceptual refinements of previous healthy aging models. First, we outline various different, often multidirectional, ways in which persons and contexts conjointly contribute to how people set, pursue, and disengage from health goals. Second, we promote consideration of context as involving unique, shared, and interactive effects of socio-economic, social, physical, care/service, and technology dimensions. Third, we highlight how the relevance, utility, and nature of these context dimensions and their role in co-constructing health goals change as individuals move through the Third Age, the Fourth Age, and a terminal stages of life. Finally, we suggest that these conceptual refinements be linked to established (motivational) theories of lifespan development and aging. Discussions In closing, we outline a set of research questions that promise to advance our understanding of the mechanisms by which contexts and aging persons co-construct healthy aging relevant goals and elaborate on the applied significance of this approach for common public health practices.
ISSN:1079-5014
1758-5368
DOI:10.1093/geronb/gbab089