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The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences 57:P396-P408 (2002)
© 2002 The Gerontological Society of America


RESEARCH ARTICLE

Ethnic Variation in the Impact of Negative Affect and Emotion Inhibition on the Health of Older Adults

Nathan S. Consedinea, Carol Magaia, Carl I. Cohenb and Michael Gillespiec

a Center for Studies of Ethnicity and Human Development, Long Island University, Brooklyn, New York
b Department of Geriatric Psychiatry, State University of New York Health Science Center, Brooklyn, New York
c Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

Carol Magai, Long Island University, 1 University Plaza, Brooklyn, NY 11201 E-mail: cmagai{at}liu.edu.

Decision Editor: Margie E. Lachman, PhD

The relations between patterns of emotional experience, emotion inhibition, and physical health have been little studied in older adults or ethnically diverse samples. Testing hypotheses derived from work on younger adults, the authors examined the relations between negative affect and emotion inhibition and that of illness (hypertension, respiratory disease, arthritis, and sleep disorder) in a sample (N = 1,118) of community-dwelling older adults from four ethnic groups: U.S.-born African Americans, African Caribbeans, U.S.-born European Americans, and Eastern European immigrants. Participants completed measures of stress, lifestyle risk factors, health, social support, trait negative emotion, and emotion inhibition. As expected, the interaction of ethnicity with emotion inhibition, and, to a lesser extent, negative affect, was significantly related to illness, even when other known risk factors were controlled for. However, the relations among these variables were complex, and the patterns did not hold for all types of illness or operate in the same direction across ethnic groups. Implications for emotion–health relationships in ethnically diverse samples are discussed.







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Copyright © 2002 by The Gerontological Society of America.