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. 2022 Dec 20;6(Suppl 1):648. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igac059.2396

INTERPERSONAL DYSFUNCTION PREDICTS SUBSEQUENT FINANCIAL EXPLOITATION VULNERABILITY IN OLDER ADULTS

Duke Han 1, Aaron Lim 2, Laura Mosqueda 3, Annie Nguyen 4, Tyler Mason 5, Gali Weissberger 6, Laura Fenton 7, Peter Lichtenberg 8
PMCID: PMC9770804

Abstract

The goal of this study was to test whether interpersonal dysfunction, characterized by loneliness and/or dissatisfaction with relationships, is an imminent predictor of financial exploitation vulnerability (FEV) among older adults within a 6-month observation period. This study also tests whether FEV prospectively predicts interpersonal dysfunction. Twenty-six adults aged 50 or older completed a study involving baseline data collection and 13 follow-ups over 6 months. Linear mixed models were used for primary analyses. After adjustment for demographic, psychological, and cognitive covariates, there were between-person effects of FEV and interpersonal dysfunction across follow-ups, suggesting that those with generally higher interpersonal dysfunction compared to other participants also reported greater FEV (B(SE)=1.09(.33), p=.003). There was a within-person effect (B(SE)=.08(.03), p=.007) of elevated interpersonal dysfunction predicting greater FEV two weeks later across all follow-ups. Within-person effect of FEV was not predictive of interpersonal dysfunction (B(SE)=.25(.15), p=.10). Among older adults, individuals with higher interpersonal dysfunction relative to others in the study reported greater FEV throughout the 6-month observation period. Increased loneliness and social dissatisfaction, relative to one’s average level, predicts subsequent increases in FEV, and may be an imminent risk factor for exploitation.


Articles from Innovation in Aging are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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