Increases in neighborhood-level foreclosure represent an important risk factor for depression in older adults. These results accord with previous studies suggesting that the effects of economic crises are typically first experienced through deficits in emotional well-being.
We examine the implications of health and personality characteristics for
late-life marital conflict, using data from the 2010–11 wave of the
National Social Life Health and Aging Project (NSHAP), a nationally
representative study with data on both partners in 955 marital and
cohabitational dyads. Using these data, we relate characteristics of husbands to
characteristics of their wives, and vice versa. Wives with husbands in fair or
poor physical health are more likely to report high levels of marital conflict,
but the reverse is not true. Similarly, wives report more conflict when their
husbands are high on Neuroticism, high on Extraversion, and low on a new measure
we call Positivity. Our findings point to noteworthy gender differences between
men and women in the associations between individual characteristics and levels
of marital conflict. We point to differences between husbands’ and
wives’ marital roles as a contributor to these differences.
Sexuality is a key component of health and functioning that changes with age. Although most sexual activity takes place with a partner, the majority of research on sexuality has focused on individuals. In this paper, we focus on the sexual dyad. We propose and test a conceptual model of the predictors of partnered sexual activity in older adulthood. This model begins with the personality of each of the partners, which affects individuals’ views of sex and characteristics of the partnership, both of which affect sexual expression in the couple. We measure a key feature of personality, Positivity, which reflects the individual’s tendency to present oneself positively in social situations. This trait, we posit, increases frequency of sex through increased desire for sex, and the subjective importance of sex to each member of the couple. In this model, Positivity also impacts characteristics of the relationship that promote dyadic sexual behavior. These processes may differ for men and women. We test this model with data from the National Social Life, Health and Aging Project, which conducted personal interviews with both partners in 940 American dyads. We find that couples in which the husbands’ (but not wives’) are high in Positivity show higher levels of sexual activity, and that this association is partially mediated by dimensions of relationship quality, but more so by individual factors such as thinking about sex and believing sex is important.
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