Social Support, Life Stress, and Subsequent Medical Care Utilization

Four-hundred thirty-seven adults 40 years old or older were monitored for medical care utilization in a health maintenance organization over a 5-year period. Rates of utilization were related, in specific ways, to initially obtained indicators of life stress and social support and to interactions be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health psychology 1987, Vol.6 (4), p.273-288
Hauptverfasser: Pilisuk, Marc, Boylan, Richard, Acredolo, Curt
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Four-hundred thirty-seven adults 40 years old or older were monitored for medical care utilization in a health maintenance organization over a 5-year period. Rates of utilization were related, in specific ways, to initially obtained indicators of life stress and social support and to interactions between life stress, social support, and age. Use of both standard and step-down hierarchical multiple-regression procedures permitted a distinction between immediate and delayed effects. Implications are drawn regarding the buffering hypothesis for the mitigating effects of social support on the likelihood of health breakdown.
ISSN:0278-6133
1930-7810
DOI:10.1037/0278-6133.6.4.273