Loneliness among Older Adults in the Netherlands, Italy, and Canada: A Multifaceted Comparison
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement
- Vol. 23 (2), 169-180
- https://doi.org/10.1353/cja.2004.0026
Abstract
Loneliness is experienced in many cultures. To properly assess cross-cultural differences, attention should be paid to the level, determinants, and measurement of loneliness. However, cross-cultural studies have rarely taken into account more than one of these. Differences in the level of loneliness were hypothesized on the basis of national differences in partnership, kinship, and friendship, which were assumed to be related to cultural standards within a society. Differences were examined among married and widowed older adults aged 70 to 89 years living independently in the Netherlands (N = 1,847), Tuscany, Italy (N = 562), and Manitoba, Canada (N = 1,134). Loneliness was measured with an 11-item scale. The Manitobans were high on emotional loneliness and the Tuscans were high on social loneliness. Partner status excepted, the determinants were nearly the same across the three locations. Differential item functioning (DIF) related to the three locations was observed for most items. Interactions with gender and the availability of a partner relationship were observed. La solitude est une expérience commune à de nombreuses cultures. Pour évaluer correctement les différences transculturelles, il faut examiner le degré de solitude, ses déterminants et les méthodes de mesure employées. Toutefois, les études transculturelles prennent rarement en compte plus d'un seul de ces facteurs. Ici, l'auteur part de l'hypothèse que les différences enregistrées dans le degré de solitude reflètent les différences nationales face aux relations avec les partenaires, la famille et les amis, différences qu'il suppose liées aux normes culturelles de la société. L'étude porte sur les différences notées chez des aînés mariés et veufs âgés de 70 à 89 ans, qui vivent de façon autonome au Pays-Bas (N = 1847), en Toscane, Italie (N = 562) et au Manitoba, Canada (N = 1134). La solitude a été mesurée à l'aide d'une échelle à 11 items. Les Manitobains ont un score élevé pour la solitude affective et les Toscans pour la solitude sociale. Exception faite du statut civil, les déterminants sont presque identiques dans les trois régions étudiées. Pour la plupart des items, l'auteur examine le rôle du fonctionnement différencié des items (differential item functioning - DIF) dans les trois régions, les interactions avec le sexe et le fait que les sujets étudiés aient ou non un partenaire.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Combating loneliness: a friendship enrichment programme for older womenAgeing and Society, 2001
- Application of a Method of Estimating DIF for Polytomous Test ItemsJournal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 1999
- Examining the Measurement Quality of Tests Containing Differentially Functioning Items: Do Biased Items Result in Poor Measurement?Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1999
- Marriage, Family and Loneliness: A Cross-National StudySociological Perspectives, 1998
- Predictors of loneliness in centenarians: A parallel studyJournal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 1997
- Method and Description of the Aging in Manitoba Project: A 20-Year Longitudinal StudyCanadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement, 1997
- Living Arrangements and Social Networks of Older AdultsJournal of Marriage and Family, 1996
- Kinship and social networks in modern societies: a cross-cultural comparison among seven nationsEuropean Sociological Review, 1990
- Personal Relationships, Social Support, and LonelinessJournal of Social and Personal Relationships, 1989
- Growing old and lonely in different societies: Toward a comparative perspectiveJournal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 1987