Connections between diabetes, depression, and purpose in life in older adults
Jonathan Sundby, Tiana Broen, Leilani Feliciano

TL;DR
This study explores how diabetes affects older adults' sense of purpose in life and finds that it is linked to lower purpose and higher depression.
Contribution
The study reveals a novel connection between diabetes, depression, and reduced purpose in life among older adults.
Findings
Diabetes is associated with lower purpose in life among older adults.
Diabetes increases the likelihood of depression in older adults.
Treating physical and mental health together may improve well-being in older adults with diabetes.
Abstract
Purpose in life is defined as the belief that one’s life has goals, direction, and meaning. In older adulthood, purpose in life is an important component of well-being and previous literature has found it to be associated with more “successful aging,” including inner strength and social integration (AshaRani et al., 2022). Our project aimed to examine whether the experience of living with diabetes impacts purpose in life in older adulthood. Diabetes is a chronic disease that requires regular monitoring of blood sugar levels, as well as lifestyle changes (dietary, exercise, medication), to prevent serious medical complications or fatal consequences. We hypothesized that the experience of living with diabetes erodes a person’s purpose in life, partially explained through the mechanism of increased risk of depression (Cho et al., 2024). Data were analyzed from older adults (65+ years; n =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Education · Psychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction · Aging and Gerontology Research
