Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/4415
Title: An interaction effect of life-threatening experience, self-efficacy, and financial resources on quality of life among Chinese middle-aged and older women
Author(s): Leung, Dion Sik Yee 
Author(s): Liu, B. C. P.
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: Springer
Journal: Ageing International 
Volume: 48
Issue: 1
Start page: 231
End page: 246
Abstract: 
The current study explores the interaction effect of adversities and self-efficacy at baseline on quality of life (QoL) at follow-up among middle-aged and older Chinese women. 531 women were interviewed in 2008 and 226 of them were re-interviewed a year later using Quality of Life Ladder (QoLL), General SelfEfficacy Scale (GSE), List of Threatening Experiences (LTE), Somatic Complaint Scale, and self-rated health. Respondents’ mean age at baseline was 55.7 (SD = 4.7, range: 50 – 78). Over a year’s time, respondents had a decline in quality of life and self-rated health (p < .001), experienced more life-threatening events (p < .05) and somatic complaints. The hierarchical multiple regression model, employed in the study, identifies three predictors of future quality of life after adding the interaction term ‘Previous LTE×Previous GSE×Previous household income’ — previous quality of life (β = .492, p < .001), previous LTE (β = -.292, p < .001), and the interaction term (β = .221, p < .05). This model explains 34.1% of the variance of future quality of life (Adjusted R2= .341, p < .001). The findings suggests that respondents’ good self-appraisal of coping resources could moderate the impact of adversities on their future quality of life. Interventions for promoting positive psychological growth among middle-aged and older adults should cover four domains, i.e. event-related factors, environmental factors, personal factors, and cognitive and coping responses. Traditional Chinese wisdom emphasizes the importance of understanding the bad (‘Yin’ — the shady side) and the good (‘Yang’ — the sunny side) aspect of life events. Future research may explore the Yin Yang perspective on life-threatening experiences and its applications in cross-cultural quality of life studies in the era of globalization.
URI: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/4415
DOI: 10.1007/s12126-021-09439-5
CIHE Affiliated Publication: Yes
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