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Analyze article and determine cultural category





Id : 698

Author :
Tymoszuk U., Perkins R., Spiro N., Williamon A., Fancourt D.

Title


Longitudinal associations between short-term, repeated, and sustained arts engagement and well-being outcomes in Older Adults

Reference :


Tymoszuk U., Perkins R., Spiro N., Williamon A., Fancourt D.; Longitudinal associations between short-term, repeated, and sustained arts engagement and well-being outcomes in Older Adults ;Journals of Gerontology - Series B Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences vol:75 issue: 7.0 page:1609

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85089607470&doi=10.1093%2fgeronb%2fgbz085&partnerID=40&md5=5411f665111eca7fcb85d4403ac652e9
Abstract Objectives: This study investigated whether frequency of receptive arts engagement over 10 years contributes to experienced, evaluative, and eudaimonic well-being in older adults. Methods: We used repeated data of 3,188 respondents from Waves 2-7 (2004/2005-2014/2015) of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. We examined longitudinal associations between short-term (frequent engagement at one wave), repeated (frequent engagement at 2-3 waves), and sustained (frequent engagement at 4-6 waves) arts engagement and experienced, evaluative and eudaimonic well-being. We fitted linear and logistic regression models adjusted for baseline well-being and a number of sociodemographic, economic, health, and social engagement factors. Results: In the fully adjusted models, short-term engagement was not longitudinally associated with well-being, but repeated engagement with the theater/concerts/opera and museums/galleries/exhibitions was associated with enhanced eudaimonic well-being, and sustained engagement with these activities was associated with greater experienced, evaluative, and eudaimonic well-being. Discussion: Long-term frequent engagement with certain arts activities is associated with higher levels of happiness, life satisfaction, self-realization, and control/autonomy in older adults. These findings suggest that policies that facilitate older adults access to arts venues and activities, and support their continued engagement with them, may help to promote happy, fulfilling lives of an increasing segment of the population. © 2019 The Author(s).



Results:


                    Category                    

             Certainity            
Heritage 0.9949
Archives 0.0001
Libraries 0.0005
Book and Press 0.0000
Visual Arts 0.0015
Performing Arts 0.0011
Audiovisual and Multimedia 0.0001
Architecture 0.0002
Adverstizing 0.0000
Art crafts 0.0003
General cultural dimension 0.0013
Note: Due to lack of computing power, results have been previously created and saved in database