6533b85afe1ef96bd12b98b7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Resilience and coping as predictors of general well-being in the elderly: A structural equation modeling approach

José M. TomásPatricia SanchoTeresa MayordomoJuan C. Meléndez

subject

MaleAgingCoping (psychology)EmotionsLatent variableStructural equation modelingAdaptation PsychologicalHumansElderly peopleProblem SolvingAgedAged 80 and overData collectionData CollectionCoping resourcesSurvey researchModels TheoreticalResilience PsychologicalPsychiatry and Mental healthSpainWell-beingFemaleGeriatrics and GerontologyPshychiatric Mental HealthPsychologyGerontologyClinical psychology

description

The aims of this article are: (a) to test for the validity of the three constructs involved in the structural model; (b) to test for the effects of both coping strategies and resilient coping on well-being in a sample of elderly, by means of a structural model with latent variables; (c) to empirically study whether a brief scale of resilient coping could predict well-being over and above that predicted by the coping resources.The research is a survey design. The sample consisted of 225 non-institutionalized elderly people living in the city of Valencia (Spain). The three constructs measured were: well-being, resilient coping, and coping strategies.The analyses consist of a series of alternative structural models with latent variables with resilience, problem-focused coping, and emotion-focused coping as the potential predictors of well-being as measured by Ryff's well-being scales. Due to parsimony reasons, the model retained is that with a single predictor of well-being: resilient coping.A latent variable measuring resilient coping is able to predict a significant and large part of the variance in well-being, without the need of including coping strategies. Results impact on well-being literature of the elderly is discussed.

https://doi.org/10.1080/13607863.2011.615737