Jensen, Afton; Claunch, Kelsie; Verdeja, Marco; Dungan, Matthew; Anderson, Shellie; Clayton, Colter K.; Goates, Michael, Thacker, Evan (Brigham Young University)
Faculty Advisor: Thacker, Evan (Life Sciences, Public Health)
The purpose of this paper is to provide a systematic review of lay perspectives on the meaning of successful aging from older adults across multiple cultures and countries. Furthermore, this article allows for a discussion of the complexity of older adults' perspectives on successful aging and how successful aging may be defined differently across cultures and countries. We conducted a systematic literature review to identify, summarize, and evaluate peer-reviewed studies of qualitative data on lay perspectives of older adults. This review included studies on elderly populations published from 2010 to 2017 that addressed older adults' lay perspectives on successful aging. Such studies involved primary research performed in the United States, Germany, Singapore, Lebanon, Mexico, Canada, and New Zealand. The key concepts that emerged from older adult responses across all studies included physical health, cognitive health, social engagement, attitude/coping, independence/security, and spirituality. The overall emerging themes from our data suggest that older adults were not as concerned with physical health as biomedical previous research of successful aging often suggest. Rather, older adults focused on maintaining positive attitudes in order to cope with life changes, valuing social engagement and contribution as more essential to successful aging. Respondents from Western Europe valued keeping positive attitudes about death and focusing on gratitude instead of worries. Additionally, respondents from the United States and Mexico placed importance on pursuing activities and interests and having strong involvement with family and friends respectively. Noting differences, respondents from the Middle East, Asia, and Oceania Region, as opposed to respondents from North America, moreso prioritized the absence of chronic disease and comfort in one's own environment over keeping active. By providing a more comprehensive organizational framework of older adults' qualitative responses to successful aging, we better understand what successful aging means across cultures.