Spousal Work Expectations and Psychological Distress: Insights from the United States and South Korea
Linh Dang, Richard Gonzalez, Carlos Mendes de Leon, Briana Mezuk

TL;DR
This study explores how spousal work expectations affect psychological distress in older couples in the US and South Korea.
Contribution
The study reveals spousal work expectations influence psychological distress differently in the US versus South Korea.
Findings
In the US, spousal work expectations were linked to increased psychological distress.
In South Korea, spousal work expectations did not significantly affect psychological distress.
Own work expectations were not significantly associated with psychological distress in either country.
Abstract
The decision to retire or continue to work past typical retirement age often involves a joint decision-making process between spouses/partners. However, it is unclear what role, if any, spousal decision on employment influences mental health among older couples. Using the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model, this study examined the dyadic associations of work expectations with psychological distress among heterosexual older couples in the United States and South Korea. Data came from the 2016-2018 Health and Retirement Study (n = 2,009 couples) and the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging Study (n = 385 couples). Perceived expectation of working in the next five years was reported on a probability scale (0-100%). Psychological distress was assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. The study found moderate to strong correlations between men and women for work…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWork-Family Balance Challenges · Retirement, Disability, and Employment · Workplace Health and Well-being
