Erschienen in:
01.12.2013 | Original Article
Appearance Distress and Dysfunction in the Elderly: International Contrasts Across Italy and the UK Using DAS59
verfasst von:
Timothy P. Moss, Annalisa Cogliandro, Maddalena Pennacchini, Vittoradolfo Tambone, Paolo Persichetti
Erschienen in:
Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
|
Ausgabe 6/2013
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Abstract
Background
As the global population grows, the percentage of those over 60 will escalate disproportionately. Their needs will become an ever more dominant feature of public policy and healthcare provision. Older adults’ appearance is often removed from cultural ideals and stereotypes of beauty, often seen as synonymous with “youth.” This has seen older adults’ concerns about appearance and body image somewhat sidelined in practice and in research. This study investigates the extent to which self-consciousness of appearance is associated with distress and dysfunction in those over 60 years old. Furthermore, we contrast the extent of this phenomenon in two European nations, UK and Italy, and consider the direct impact and interaction of cultural context and participant gender.
Method
To make an objective measurement of distress and dysfunction, we translated a widely used psychometric measure, the Derriford Appearance Scale 59 following an established and reliable translation protocol. Data were collected from community samples.
Results
The Italian translation was sound, with acceptability in the Italian-speaking sample and acceptable internal consistency scores for full-scale and subscales. ANOVA analysis demonstrated that for overall adjustment, and all subscale scores, the Italians were more distressed about their appearance than UK comparators. Moreover, there were significant differences between Italian women and men, with Italian women more distressed than Italian men overall, and also general self-consciousness, sexual self-consciousness, and social self-consciousness subscales.
Conclusion
These results are considered in the context of aging and cultural and gender issues in appearance, including the Italian concept of bella figura.
Level of Evidence IV
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www.springer.com/00266.