Considering Community: Examining Civic Engagement and Well-Being in Later Life
Lauren Gil Hayes, Morgan Stangl, Man Guo, Yi Wang

TL;DR
This study finds that civic engagement in older adults is linked to lower loneliness and better health, suggesting community involvement can improve well-being.
Contribution
The study introduces civic engagement as a significant yet underexamined community-level factor influencing well-being in aging adults.
Findings
Higher civic engagement is significantly associated with lower loneliness and better self-rated health in aging adults.
The relationship between civic engagement and health is stronger than its relationship with loneliness.
Interpersonal support does not moderate the effects of civic engagement on health or loneliness.
Abstract
The socio-ecological model (SEM) highlights how well-being is shaped by individual, interpersonal, and community-level factors. While individual behaviors and interpersonal relationships are well-documented influences on well-being, civic engagement—through volunteer activities, adult learning, and special interest group participation—remains an underexamined community-level engagement factor. This study investigates whether civic engagement is associated with loneliness and health in aging adults and whether interpersonal support moderates these associations. Using data from the 2018 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) Leave-Behind Questionnaire (n = 5,530), a nationally representative survey of aging U.S. adults, we employ three survey-weighted Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regressions with robust standard errors, adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic characteristics. Results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Community Health and Development · Aging and Gerontology Research
