Adults in their senior years have coped better emotionally with the pandemic, compared to people in the lower age brackets, according to research released recently from UBC.
The research in the Journal of Gerontology: Psychological Sciences, states that adults aged 60 and up have done much better than younger adults (18–39) and middle-aged adults (40–59).
Based on daily diary data collected between mid-March and mid-April of this year, the researchers found that older adults experienced greater emotional well-being and felt less stressed and threatened by the pandemic.
“Our findings provide new evidence that older adults are emotionally resilient despite public discourse often portraying their vulnerability. We also found that younger adults are at greater risk for loneliness and psychological distress during the pandemic,” said Patrick Klaiber, the study’s lead author and a graduate student in the UBC department of psychology.
For the study, the researchers analyzed data from 776 participants aged 18–91, who lived in Canada and the U.S. and completed daily surveys for one week about their stressors, positive events and their emotional well-being during the first several weeks of the pandemic.
The time period was selected as it was likely to be the period of greatest disruption and uncertainty as local, provincial and state governments began issuing stay-at-home orders.
Klaiber says the difference in reported stress levels may be a result of age-related stressors and how well the different age groups respond to stress.
“Younger and middle-aged adults are faced with family- and work-related challenges, such as working from home, homeschooling children and unemployment,” added Klaiber.
“They are also more likely to experience different types of ongoing non-pandemic stressors than older adults, such as interpersonal conflicts.
“While older adults are faced with stressors such as higher rates of disease contraction, severe complications and mortality from COVID-19, they also possess more coping skills to deal with stress as they are older and wiser.”
The study also reveals older and middle-aged adults experienced more daily positive events — such as remote positive social interactions — in 75 per cent of their daily surveys, which helped increase positive emotions compared to younger adults.
“While positive events led to increases in positive emotions for all three age groups, younger adults had the least positive events but also benefited the most from them,” said Klaiber.
“This is a good reminder for younger adults to create more opportunities for physically-distanced or remote positive experiences as a way of mitigating distress during the pandemic.”
The researchers hope their findings would help inform the development of programs and strategies to bolster mental health for adults of all age groups.
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