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Transitions in loneliness in later life: the role of social comparisons and coping strategies

Deborah Morgan Orcid Logo, Vanessa Burholt Orcid Logo, (CFAS Wales Research Team)

Ageing and Society, Volume: 42, Issue: 7, Pages: 1607 - 1628

Swansea University Authors: Deborah Morgan Orcid Logo, Vanessa Burholt Orcid Logo

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Abstract

This study explored the coping strategies and social comparisons used by older adults on different loneliness trajectories (decreased loneliness, stable loneliness and degenerating loneliness). The adaptive consequences of social comparison in later life are recognised as an important strategy for p...

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Published in: Ageing and Society
ISSN: 0144-686X 1469-1779
Published: Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2022
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa57254
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Abstract: This study explored the coping strategies and social comparisons used by older adults on different loneliness trajectories (decreased loneliness, stable loneliness and degenerating loneliness). The adaptive consequences of social comparison in later life are recognised as an important strategy for preserving life satisfaction regardless of age-related losses. Coping strategies are also important in managing loneliness. Narrative interviews were conducted with lonely older adults (N = 11) who had participated in Wave One of the Maintaining Function and Well-being in Later Life Study Wales (CFAS Wales). The study found key differences in the coping strategies employed by older adults on different loneliness trajectories. Differences in coping styles between those who reported decreased loneliness and those who were chronically lonely stemmed from perceptions as to whether loneliness was modifiable or not. Different types of social comparison were also found to modulate the loneliness experience. The findings indicate that higher-order strategies (problem, emotional and meaning focused) are not distinct entities but are part of a dynamic process. The management of loneliness in later life may be dependent on several factors, including older adults’ interpretations of the cause of loneliness. These interpretations will have implications for interventions aimed at alleviating chronic loneliness, where the focus may have to be on changing older adult's perceptions of unmodifiable loneliness.
Keywords: loneliness; coping strategies; social comparisons; transitions
College: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Funders: This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/I900993/1). The CFAS Wales study was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number RES-060-25-0060) and Higher Education Funding Council Wales as ‘Maintaining Function and Well-being in Later Life: A Longitudinal Cohort Study’.
Issue: 7
Start Page: 1607
End Page: 1628