Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging

The extent to which older adults’ ageist attitudes associate with their will-to-live has barely been studied. Moreover, whether this effect is moderated by older adults’ age, medical conditions, and attitudes toward their own aging has not been investigated. These associations were examined by two s...

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Main Authors: Racheli-Lital Gvili, Ehud Bodner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6736
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spelling doaj-294b72c8ad7f4068a7ea4bc81ee763cb2021-07-15T15:34:14ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012021-06-01186736673610.3390/ijerph18136736Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward AgingRacheli-Lital Gvili0Ehud Bodner1Interdisciplinary Department of Social Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 5290002, IsraelInterdisciplinary Department of Social Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 5290002, IsraelThe extent to which older adults’ ageist attitudes associate with their will-to-live has barely been studied. Moreover, whether this effect is moderated by older adults’ age, medical conditions, and attitudes toward their own aging has not been investigated. These associations were examined by two studies. Study 1 examined the relationship between ageist attitudes and will-to-live among individuals aged 48–97, and the moderating roles of age and medical conditions on this connection. Study 2 reassessed this connection in a new sample of older adults (people aged 60–94 years) and examined the moderating role of their attitudes toward aging in this regard. In line with the hypothesis of the first study, ageist attitudes and will-to-live were negatively associated among older adults with more medical conditions. In accordance with the hypotheses of study 2, the ageist attitudes and will-to-live connection was reconstructed, and when regressed on the ageist attitudes × attitudes toward aging interaction, it remained significant only among those with increased ageist attitudes. These findings demonstrate the negative effect that ageist attitudes may have on will-to-live, especially among the very old, and particularly when their health deteriorates, and support the utility of interventions aimed at increasing their will-to-live.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6736ageismattitudes toward agingmedical conditionsstereotypeswill-to-live
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Racheli-Lital Gvili
Ehud Bodner
spellingShingle Racheli-Lital Gvili
Ehud Bodner
Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
ageism
attitudes toward aging
medical conditions
stereotypes
will-to-live
author_facet Racheli-Lital Gvili
Ehud Bodner
author_sort Racheli-Lital Gvili
title Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
title_short Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
title_full Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
title_fullStr Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
title_full_unstemmed Ageist Attitudes Are Associated with Will-to-Live and Moderated by Age, Medical Conditions and Attitudes toward Aging
title_sort ageist attitudes are associated with will-to-live and moderated by age, medical conditions and attitudes toward aging
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1661-7827
1660-4601
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The extent to which older adults’ ageist attitudes associate with their will-to-live has barely been studied. Moreover, whether this effect is moderated by older adults’ age, medical conditions, and attitudes toward their own aging has not been investigated. These associations were examined by two studies. Study 1 examined the relationship between ageist attitudes and will-to-live among individuals aged 48–97, and the moderating roles of age and medical conditions on this connection. Study 2 reassessed this connection in a new sample of older adults (people aged 60–94 years) and examined the moderating role of their attitudes toward aging in this regard. In line with the hypothesis of the first study, ageist attitudes and will-to-live were negatively associated among older adults with more medical conditions. In accordance with the hypotheses of study 2, the ageist attitudes and will-to-live connection was reconstructed, and when regressed on the ageist attitudes × attitudes toward aging interaction, it remained significant only among those with increased ageist attitudes. These findings demonstrate the negative effect that ageist attitudes may have on will-to-live, especially among the very old, and particularly when their health deteriorates, and support the utility of interventions aimed at increasing their will-to-live.
topic ageism
attitudes toward aging
medical conditions
stereotypes
will-to-live
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6736
work_keys_str_mv AT rachelilitalgvili ageistattitudesareassociatedwithwilltoliveandmoderatedbyagemedicalconditionsandattitudestowardaging
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