The Impact of Formal and Informal Volunteering Patterns on Health in Older Adults
Huei-wern Shen, Peter Sun, Yi Wang

TL;DR
This study explores how different patterns of formal and informal volunteering affect the health of older adults.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct volunteering patterns and their specific health impacts using longitudinal data and sequence analysis.
Findings
Volunteering patterns are associated with better cognitive function and fewer depressive symptoms in older adults.
Only high-intensity dual volunteering is linked to better self-rated health compared to non-volunteering.
Health benefits persist even as volunteering involvement declines over time.
Abstract
In later life, many individuals participate in both formal and informal volunteering. While the health benefits of volunteering are well-documented, little is known about the impact of patterns of formal and informal volunteering on health outcomes among older adults. Using five waves of data (2010–2018) from the Health and Retirement Study, multichannel sequence analysis and cluster analysis were applied to identify volunteering patterns among 3,579 individuals aged 65 and older in 2010 who remained alive throughout the study period (17,895 observations). Four distinct clusters (C1-C4) were identified: (C1) Decreasing Informal Volunteering (37%), (C2) Steady Non-Involvement (31%), (C3) Decreasing High-Intensity Dual Involvement (17%), and (C4) Decreasing Low-Intensity Dual Involvement (15%). Then, controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, three regression models were used to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonprofit Sector and Volunteering · Health disparities and outcomes · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
