Authors
Agnes Szabo, Joanne Allen, Christine Stephens, Fiona Alpass
Publication date
2019/1/9
Journal
The gerontologist
Volume
59
Issue
1
Pages
58-68
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Purpose
There is support for the role of Internet use in promoting well-being among older people. However, there are also contradictory findings which may be attributed to methodological issues. First, research has focused on frequency of online activity rather than how engagement in different types of online activities may influence well-being. Secondly, previous studies have used either cross-sectional designs, which cannot elucidate causality or intervention designs with uncontrolled extraneous variables. In this longitudinal observational study, we test the indirect impact of online engagement for social, informational, and instrumental purposes on older adults’ well-being via reducing loneliness and supporting social engagement.
Design and Method
A population sample of 1,165 adults aged 60–77 (M = 68.22, SD = 4.42; 52.4% female) was surveyed over 3 waves. Using …
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