黑料正能量 Note: When my graduate school professors discussed resilience, it always bothered me. Decades of looking for tools to measure it came up with the same scales scientists use to measure sustainability, and it seemed like just a new word for researchers to play with. But over time, investigating resilience has unfolded new concepts of well-being that rely on an interwoven understanding of capitals鈥攃apacities that people hold through environmental, physical, monetary, social, and educational resources鈥攖hat provide a helpful framework for why some people succeed and why some don鈥檛 when faced with life鈥檚 shocks and stressors. Several studies, as the article notes below, indicate that the onset of mental health challenges when a person is not resilient鈥攆or example, when a person is poor, has a chronic health condition, or has poor housing鈥攃an lead to greater detriments in overall well-being. While we know how important is to understand social determinants and their effect on a person鈥檚 mental health, it鈥檚 also important to take a strengths-based perspective and recognize that the struggle of living with and overcoming mental health challenges builds resilience in people, particularly when they are allowed to engage in a person-centered approach to their own care. This theme offers an exciting opportunity into new research and service paradigms that build off of a person鈥檚 current capacity to measurably increase resilience.
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Tougher Than They Look
黑料正能量 Times; Paula Span, 9/12/2014听
Resilience, the subject of听, reminds me of what a Supreme Court justice once said of pornography: It鈥檚 hard to define, but we know it when we see it.
We鈥檝e all noticed resilience鈥檚 effects, haven鈥檛 we? Most older people cope with several chronic diseases and have encountered losses and challenges. Some seem to withdraw into isolation and inactivity even when they remain relatively strong.
Others respond more like the late Evelyn Nade, whom I met in a New Jersey nursing home a few years ago. She was 82 then, a wheelchair user who couldn鈥檛 rise from her bed without two aides using a mechanical hoist 鈥 yet she was the sunniest person in the place, the president of the residents鈥 council, the founder of a Red Hat Society chapter and a formidable poker player.
Age, health and finances can鈥檛 fully explain such disparities, so social scientists are constantly exploring other factors that might play a role.
When I spoke with the new study鈥檚 lead author, Lydia Manning, a gerontologist at Concordia University Chicago, she took a stab at a simple definition of resilience: 鈥淗ow people manage adversity and hardship over the life course.鈥 Often, she said, they talk about learning this trait, this sense of themselves as people who can negotiate obstacles, from tough experiences earlier in life.
Scientists have been writing and thinking about resilience for several decades. Now, in Dr. Manning鈥檚 study of 10,753 people (average age: almost 69) drawn from three waves of the national Health and Retirement Study, 鈥渨e鈥檙e starting to measure it,鈥 Dr. Manning said 鈥 鈥渁s squishy and fuzzy a concept as it is.鈥
To do that, the team devised and validated a simplified scale of 12 items, based on how strongly subjects agreed or disagreed with statements like: 鈥淲hen I really want to do something, I usually find a way to succeed at it,鈥 and 鈥淚 have a sense of direction and purpose in life.鈥 Also included were statements like, 鈥淚f something can go wrong for me, it will,鈥 and 鈥淭here is really no way I can solve the problems I have.鈥
Over two years, 11 percent of this sample developed a new chronic condition: heart or lung disease, stroke, psychiatric problems, cancer.
These can be devastating. Yet the higher people scored on the resilience scale, the less likely this new obstacle was to disable them.
The researchers looked at their subjects鈥 subsequent ability to perform 鈥渁ctivities of daily living,鈥 like bathing and dressing, and to handle 鈥渋nstrumental activities of daily living鈥 like using a phone and making meals.
Dr. Manning and her colleagues tried to account for the participants鈥 actual health, including depression, and for sociodemographic differences. The researchers found that when a new disease struck, the least resilient had on average nearly triple the amount of activities of daily living disabilities, compared to the most resilient.
Resilience provided what researchers called a 鈥渕oderating effect.鈥 The extent of disability among this relatively young population was already low: Among those facing a new illness, the least resilient subsequently experienced on average only one A.D.L. disability. But the most resilient were on average barely disabled at all by a new illness.
鈥淵ou throw something at them, something bad 鈥 a new chronic condition is really hard 鈥 and we see this bounce-back pretty rapidly,鈥 said the co-author Dawn Carr, a gerontologist at the Stanford Center on Longevity. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e able to maintain their function.鈥
How this works is a question this study can鈥檛 answer. But Dr. Manning points out that people often describe resilience as acquired, during 鈥渕oments of adversity.鈥
So perhaps other people can acquire it, too, even late in life. 鈥淲hat strategies would help people bolster their resilience?鈥 she said, envisioning 鈥渞esilience interventions鈥 in the future. 鈥淚 believe that unlike some concepts 鈥 where you either have it or you don鈥檛, you鈥檙e resilient or you鈥檙e vulnerable 鈥 everybody has the capacity for resilience.鈥
Confession: I鈥檓 neither a religious nor a 鈥渟piritual鈥 person, and much of the positive-attitude talk we constantly hear strikes me as malarkey. Sometimes, what doesn鈥檛 kill you makes you weaker. And yet. 鈥
I鈥檝e reported here on evidence that a sense of purpose听听and that听听is linked to improved cognitive function.
I鈥檝e come across a couple of recent studies on the impact of religiosity. Even 鈥渘onorganizational forms鈥 appear to听听or help people recover from it, and听听is associated with lower levels of certain physiological problems.
Self-efficacy, mastery, gratitude 鈥 they鈥檙e amorphous concepts, but researchers are finding that they can have real-world effects. As we all wait to learn more, it鈥檚 clear that a healthy old age, however defined, involves more than excellent blood pressure.
Something else is going on. 鈥淚t is slippery stuff,鈥 Dr. Manning acknowledged. 鈥淚 find it fascinating.鈥
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