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Volunteering, Self-Perceptions of Aging, and Mental Health in Later Life

Cited 15 time in Web of Science Cited 16 time in Scopus
Authors

Huo, Meng; Miller, Lisa M. Soederberg; Kim, Kyungmin; Liu, Siwei

Issue Date
2021-10
Publisher
Gerontological Society of America
Citation
The Gerontologist, Vol.61 No.7, pp.1131-1140
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Scholars argue that volunteering enhances social, physical, and cognitive activities that are increasingly valued as people age, which in turn improves older adults' well-being via a host of psychosocial and neurobiological mechanisms. This study explicitly tested older adults' self-perceptions of aging as a mechanism underlying the mental health benefits of volunteering. Research Design and Methods: Using 2-wave data from the Health and Retirement Study (2008/2010 for Wave 1 and 2012/2014 for Wave 2), we analyzed reports from a pooled sample of older adults aged 65 or older (N = 9,017). Participants reported on demographic characteristics, volunteer work (did not volunteer, 1-99 h/year, 100+ h/year), self-perceptions of aging, and depressive symptoms. We estimated an autoregressive cross-lagged panel model. Results: Volunteering for 100 h or more per year was associated with older adults' more positive and less negative self-perceptions of aging in the subsequent wave (i.e., 4 years later), which in turn predicted fewer depressive symptoms. Discussion and Implications: This study suggests the promising role of volunteering in shaping older adults' self-perceptions of aging on a sustained basis and refines our understanding of the benefits volunteering brings. Findings shed light on future interventions aimed at improving older adults' adjustment to age-related changes and lessening ageism in society.
ISSN
0016-9013
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/180112
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnaa164
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