Capturing successful aging in daily life: exploring the intensive longitudinal findings from a US national sample

Dwight C K Tse*, Kelsey P Finley, Linzi F Crawford, Jeanne Nakamura

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Thus far, successful aging has been conceptualized and operationalized as a relatively static construct. Investigating daily successful aging provides a dynamic approach highlighting how successful aging can be achieved through everyday actions, giving older adults a stronger sense of control over their lives.

Research Design and Methods: We used 8-day diary data from MIDUS 2’s US national sample of older adults (N=716, Mage[SD]=68.80[6.45]). Participants reported daily physical symptoms, functioning, and engagement in life (collectively, successful aging indicators), alongside daily stressors and positive events. We also correlated personal mean and standard deviation of the indicators with one-time measures of health and well-being.

Results: Intra-class correlation revealed substantial within-person variability in successful aging indicators. These indicators were associated with daily stressors and positive events. One-time health and well-being indicators were positively associated with personal mean levels of successful aging, although their correlations with personal standard deviations were less consistent.

Discussion and Implications: Intra-individual variations in successful aging as everyday symptoms, functioning, and engagement with life are observable among a national sample of older adults, challenging the static view of successful aging and, instead, emphasizing the need to understand “micro-level” contributors of successful aging.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbergnae121
JournalGerontologist
Early online date2 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • daily diary
  • intraindividual variability
  • multilevel modeling

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