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Conjugal support: factor structure for older husbands and wives

T B Anderson1, B J McCulloch

  • 1Department of Human Development and Family Studies, University of North Carolina, Greensboro.

Journal of Gerontology
|May 1, 1993
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Social support between older spouses is a multidimensional construct, not a couple

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Area of Science:

  • Gerontology
  • Social Psychology
  • Family Studies

Background:

  • Understanding social support is crucial for aging well.
  • Marital relationships significantly impact older adults' well-being.
  • Previous research has not fully clarified the structure of support within older couples.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the factor structure of social support among older spouses.
  • To determine if conjugal support functions as a couple's construct or an individual one.
  • To explore the dimensions of social support within the marital dyad.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) on data from 298 older marital dyads.
  • Examined nested measurement models at both couple and individual levels.
  • Analyzed the Aging Couples Study dataset.

Main Results:

  • Conjugal support was identified as a husband/wife construct, not a couple construct.
  • Social support within marriage is multidimensional, comprising instrumental, emotional, and confiding factors.
  • Husbands and wives demonstrated differing perceptions of these support dimensions.

Conclusions:

  • Conjugal support is best understood at the individual level within older marriages.
  • The multidimensional nature of support (instrumental, emotional, confiding) highlights varied spousal contributions.
  • Acknowledging differing perceptions of support is vital for marital satisfaction in later life.