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Appraisal, Emotion Regulation, and Cognitive Reserve

Depressive symptoms and time perspective in older adults: associations beyond personality and negative life events

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Pages 1674-1683 | Received 24 Feb 2018, Accepted 24 Jul 2018, Published online: 18 Nov 2018
 

Abstract

Objectives: To examine the extent to which time perspective, an individual’s habitual way of relating to the past, the present, and the future time frames, accounts for variations in self-reported depressive symptoms among older adults.

Method: Four hundred two participants (60–90 years) completed the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale (CES-D) and the Swedish Zimbardo Time perspective Inventory (S-ZTPI). The influence of personality as reflected by the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) and self-reported negative life events (NLEs) were controlled for in hierarchic regression analyses.

Results: The six S-ZTPI dimensions accounted for 24.5% of the variance in CES-D scores beyond age and gender. Half of the variance remained when the TCI factors and NLEs were controlled for. Past Negative, Future Negative, and Past Positive (inverse association) were the significant unique predictors. Significant age interactions were observed for two S-ZTPI dimensions, with a diminished association to depressive symptoms for Future Negative and a magnified association for Present Fatalistic with higher age.

Conclusions: The results demonstrate a substantial relation between facets of time perspective and depressive symptoms in old age. They also indicate an age-related shift in the relative importance from concerns about of the future (Future Negative) to the present (Present Fatalistic) with increased age. In young old-age, when the future is more ‘open’, future worries (Future Negative) may be a more frequent source of distress. In late senescence, perceived threats to autonomy (e.g. physical health problems and cognitive deficits), as reflected by higher scores on Present Fatalistic, may instead have more bearing on mood state.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

The Betula Study was supported by the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation [grant number 1988-0082:17; J2001-0682]; Swedish Council for Planning and Coordination of Research [grant numbers D1988-0092, D1989-0115, D1990-0074, D1991-0258, D1992-0143, D1997-0756, D1997-1841, D1999-0739, B1999-474]; Swedish Council for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences [grant number F377/1988-2000]; the Swedish Council for Social Research [grant numbers 1988-1990: 88-0082, 311/1991-2000]; and the Swedish Research Council [grant numbers 345-2003-3883, 315-2004-6977]. The present research was additionally supported by a grant to M. Rönnlund and M. G. Carelli from the Swedish Council for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences [grant number 2015–02199].