Effects of the level and instability of self-esteem on help-seeking and its orientation
Jun Nakahara

TL;DR
This study explores how self-esteem levels and instability affect help-seeking behavior in older adults.
Contribution
The study empirically tests how self-esteem level and instability interact to influence help-seeking behavior in older adults.
Findings
Self-esteem instability positively predicts help-seeking when self-esteem is low.
There is no significant relationship between self-esteem and help-seeking orientation.
Help-seeking behavior may be driven by unconscious psychological processes.
Abstract
Some older adults do not seek or even refuse help when needed or when help is available. Therefore, it is important to examine the factors of help-seeking behavior and its orientation among older adults, particularly self-esteem. Previous theoretical assumptions show that individuals with high self-esteem and instability would estimate the ego-threat associated with help-seeking as high and suppress help-seeking; conversely, those with low self-esteem and high instability would be motivated to improve their self-evaluation and tend to productively cope with the task, which would promote help-seeking. This study aims to test these hypotheses. Data were obtained from 138 older adults through a one-week diary survey using the experience sampling method. The seven-day intra-individual standard deviation was used for the self-esteem instability index, and the mean was used for the level…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIdentity, Memory, and Therapy · Health disparities and outcomes · Aging and Gerontology Research
