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1.
Psychol Sport Exerc ; 66: 102391, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37665854

ABSTRACT

Perfectionistic pressure from coaches and parents is likely to contribute to the development of perfectionism in youth athletes. However, if and how perfectionistic pressure from coaches and parents interact to predict the development of perfectionism is unknown. With this in mind, the present study tested a new model - the 2 × 2 Model of Perfectionistic Pressure - that focuses on the different combinations of perfectionistic pressure youth athletes can experience. Four within-person combinations of perfectionistic pressure are identified and compared: Pure coach pressure (high coach pressure/low parental pressure), pure parental pressure (low coach pressure/high parental pressure), mixed pressure (high coach pressure/high parental pressure), and low pressure (low coach pressure/low parental pressure). To test the model, a sample of 210 youth athletes (M age = 14.68 years) completed measures of perfectionistic strivings, perfectionistic concerns, coach pressure to be perfect, and parental pressure to be perfect. Moderated hierarchical regression and simple slopes analyses revealed that mixed pressure was related to the highest levels of both perfectionistic strivings and perfectionistic concerns. The findings provide initial evidence for the new model and suggests it will be useful in studying the development of perfectionism and other outcomes in sport.


Subject(s)
Perfectionism , Sports , Youth Sports , Adolescent , Humans , Athletes , Parents
2.
Int J Aging Hum Dev ; : 914150231194241, 2023 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37563856

ABSTRACT

This cross-sectional study included 211 employed family caregivers with older relatives living in care facilities in Japan. Using multiple linear regression analysis, we examined the caregiving context after institutionalization of an older family member. Specifically, we examined predictors of negative spillover from caregiving to employment among family caregivers. The outcome was the extent of negative spillover. Primary predictors included caregiver characteristics and postinstitutionalization caregiving contexts such as caregiving tasks and dissatisfaction with institutional care services. Among all caregivers, 134 (63.5%) were female, and approximately half of all caregivers reported satisfaction with institutional care services. We found that dissatisfaction with institutional care services and being a female each had a main effect on greater negative spillover. However, they did not have any interacting effect on negative spillover after the institutionalization. Negative spillover did not terminate when older family members were institutionalized. Higher satisfaction with institutional care may reduce negative spillover.

3.
Psychol Sport Exerc ; 65: 102348, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36465329

ABSTRACT

Developmentally appropriate sport contexts have the potential to positively influence young people's physiological, psychological, and social outcomes. However, little is known about how families returned to sport in the wake of COVID-19-related restrictions or how socioeconomic and demographic factors influenced parents' perceptions of barriers to returning. A nationally representative sample (N = 6183) of American youth sport parents completed a questionnaire in which they provided demographic information and answered questions related to the barriers they perceived in returning to sport, such as the risk of their child getting sick. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the relationships among a range of socioeconomic and demographic factors and these barriers to returning. Results suggest that parents from racially minoritized and urban neighborhoods held higher levels of concern over health-related and practical barriers to returning to sport. Findings highlight the importance of designing available, equitable, and appropriate youth sport contexts.

4.
BMC Geriatr ; 22(1): 415, 2022 05 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35546227

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although there is a general trend of functional decline with age, there lacks an understanding of how cancer diagnosis and other factors may contribute to this trend. This study aimed to examine functional limitation trajectories among adults with and without cancer, and before versus after the cancer diagnosis, and to explore potential contributing factors associated with functional trajectories among cancer survivors. METHODS: The sample were middle-aged and older Chinese adults who participated in all 3 waves of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS, 2011-2015). Ordinary and multiphase growth curve analyses were conducted to examine (1) differences in functional trajectories between participants with (n = 139) and without cancer (n = 7,313), (2) pre-and post-cancer diagnosis changes in functional limitations among those who reported a cancer diagnosis over the 4-year timeframe, and (3) contributing factors associated with functional trajectories among cancer survivors, guided by the Disablement Process Models, including psychological (depressive symptoms), physical (pain and falls), cognitive (self-reported memory problems), and environmental (social contact and available support) factors. RESULTS: There was a trend of increased functional limitations among all participants over time (unstandardized ß = 0.17, p < .0001). However, participants with cancer did not differ from non-cancer participants in neither the level (unstandardized ß = 0.77, p = .08) nor the rate of functional decline (unstandardized ß = -0.43, p = .07). Functional limitation trajectories were different pre- versus post-cancer diagnosis, although not in expected directions (unstandardized ß = -0.48, p < .05). Cancer survivors with greater pain had higher levels of functional limitations which were sustained over time compared to those with less pain (unstandardized ß = 0.93, p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: The study confirmed that Chinese middle-aged and older adults had overall decreased functional decline over time. A novel finding that cancer survivors experienced less rapidly functional decline after the cancer diagnosis suggested that cancer diagnosis might serve as an inflection point at which early intervention is promising to slow the functional decline. In addition, findings that within-person contributing factors, such as pain, can be influential in functional limitation trajectories suggested that more attention is needed to pay to patients with cancer-pain. These findings demonstrated the heterogeneity of functional limitation trajectories and needs for person-centered interventions among Chinese cancer survivors.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Retirement , Aged , China/epidemiology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Middle Aged , Neoplasms/diagnosis , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Neoplasms/therapy , Pain , Self Report
5.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci ; 77(8): 1406-1415, 2022 08 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35595515

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Dementia family caregivers report poor sleep and mood, typically attributed to chronic stress and managing frequent daily stressors. Although many studies use global retrospective reports of these indicators, the current study examines mechanisms linking sleep, negative affect, stress biomarkers, and high-/low-stress contexts at the daily level, from the biopsychosocial perspective of stressor exposure and reactivity. METHOD: One hundred seventy-three caregivers (Mage = 61.97, SD = 10.66) were providing care at home and used adult day services (ADS) at least 2 days a week. Caregivers reported their bedtime, wake time, sleep quality, and nighttime problems of the person with dementia (PwD) daily for eight consecutive days, concurrently reporting noncare stressors, negative affect, and providing five salivary cortisol samples per day. We conducted multilevel analysis to examine whether caregiver sleep characteristics overnight (i.e., total time in bed, quality, and PwD sleep problems) were associated with their anxious and depressive symptoms on days where ADS were utilized versus non-ADS days (i.e., low stress vs. high stress), and whether cortisol daily total output as area under the curve (AUCg) mediated the direct associations, at the within- and between-person levels. RESULTS: On high-stress (i.e., non-ADS) days when caregivers had a longer time in bed than usual the night before, they were less anxious on the following day; the direct association was statistically mediated through lower cortisol AUCg during the day. DISCUSSION: Staying longer in bed than usual before an upcoming high-stress day may help dementia family caregivers better regulate cortisol stress reactivity and anxious symptoms.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Dementia , Caregivers/psychology , Dementia/psychology , Depression/epidemiology , Humans , Hydrocortisone/analysis , Retrospective Studies , Sleep , Stress, Psychological/psychology
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