The purpose of this study was to investigate relationships between marital status, social support, and loneliness in visually impaired elderly people. The sample was derived from a larger study designed to examine loneliness in low-vision adults (Foxall et al. 1992). Subjects were 87 visually impaired elderly people who were at least 65 years of age, had a visual acuity of 20/70 or less in the better eye, had been visually impaired for at least 1 year, and were not totally blind. Data were collected by interview using the Revised UCLA Loneliness Scale, the Social Support Questionnaire, and a demographic and health information form. Results indicate marital status was not directly related to loneliness but may be indirectly related through social support. Loneliness was associated with greater network dissatisfaction related to caring and relaxation. Findings provide direction for nursing assessment of and intervention into loneliness with visually impaired elderly people.
The purpose of this analysis was to identify predictors of loneliness in women 75 years of age and older with low vision. The sample of 56 women was derived from a larger study of low-vision adults. Women's loneliness, optimism, social support, living arrangement, vision, and perceived health were examined using the revised University of California, Los Angeles, Loneliness Scale, the Life Orientation Test, the Social Support Questionnaire, and a demographic questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Pearson correlations, multiple regressions, and t-tests. Optimism and social support satisfaction were found to predict degree of loneliness in the sample. Women who were less optimistic and less satisfied with their social support system experienced higher levels of loneliness. Duration of visual impairment was associated with duration of loneliness. The findings provide nurses with information for identifying low-vision older women who are at risk for loneliness.
1. Loneliness was not found to be a significant problem in a study of low-vision older clients with various living arrangements. Different types of support networks did serve different functions depending on whether clients lived alone or with others. 2. Clients living alone were more satisfied with supporters who helped them when they were feeling down, whereas clients living with others were more satisfied with supporters who cared about them. 3. Clients living alone relied on friends and children as the most important sources of support; clients living with others relied most on children for the majority of their needs. 4. Supportive expectations should be shared with supporters in the network to prevent burnout of the support person and lack of support for the client in crises if the supportive person is not available.
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