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首页> 外文期刊>The Gerontologist >How Do You Feel About. . .? Health Outcomes in Late Life and Self-Perceptions of Health and Well-Being
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How Do You Feel About. . .? Health Outcomes in Late Life and Self-Perceptions of Health and Well-Being

机译:你对这个怎么看。 。 。?晚年的健康结果以及对健康和幸福感的自我认知

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Research has shown over the years that the self-perceptions of older adults about their health and well-being may be at least as important as objective data for predicting the course of their health over time. I review a series of studies that span 30 years in which I and my colleagues have asked older adults in the community about their self-rated health and well-being across a spectrum of parameters, including self-rated health, social support, and mood (both negative and positive), and about whether their basic needs are being met. The social environment shapes perceptions of health and well-being, as does the body. Feelings, such as feelings about health and well-being, are therefore a key (but not the only) psychological-behavioral bridge between the body (genome and physiology) and society (environmental stressors and social context). Following a review of these studies, I attempt to place these perceptions of health and well-being in a social context, a context critical to understanding the consistency and strength of these studies (and others performed over many years) documenting the association between answers to the question "How do you feel about...?" and health outcomes over time. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
机译:多年来的研究表明,老年人对他们的健康和福祉的自我认知可能至少与客观数据一样重要,以预测其随着时间的健康状况。我回顾了长达30年的一系列研究,在这些研究中,我和我的同事向社区中的老年人询问了他们对自我评估的健康和幸福的情况,涉及的范围包括自我评估的健康,社会支持和情绪(消极和积极),以及他们的基本需求是否得到满足。社会环境和身体一样,都会塑造人们对健康和福祉的看法。因此,诸如对健康和幸福感的感觉是身体(基因组和生理学)与社会(环境压力源和社会环境)之间的关键(但不是唯一)心理-行为桥梁。在对这些研究进行回顾之后,我尝试将这些对健康和幸福感的看法放在一个社会背景下,这对于理解这些研究(以及多年来进行的其他研究)的一致性和强度至关重要,证明了对答案的关联性。问题“您对……的感觉如何?”和健康结果随时间的推移。 [出版物摘要]

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  • 来源
    《The Gerontologist》 |2008年第4期|p.415-422|共8页
  • 作者

    Dan G Blazer;

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    Dan G. Blazer, MD, PhD1Address correspondence to Dan G. Blazer, MD, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.The information in this manuscript was presented as the Kleemeier Award Lecture on November 16, 2006, at the annual meeting of the Gerontological Society of America, in Dallas, TX.Many colleagues have worked with me over the years in these explorations. They include (and this is not a perception) Linda George, PhD;

    Celia Hybels, PhD;

    Gerda Fillenbaum, PhD;

    Bruce Burchett, PhD;

    Judith Hays, RN, PhD;

    Dana Hughes, RN, PhD;

    Carl Pieper, PhD;

    Teresa Seeman, PhD;

    David Schoenfcld, MD;

    Lynda Malmrose, PhD;

    Natalie Sachs-Ericsson, PhD;

    Deborah Gold, PhD;

    Jeffrey Houpt, MD;

    George Maddox, PhD;

    and Berton Kaplan, PhD.1 Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.;

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