The activity theory posits that productive activities are beneficial to older people's well-being. This study examined how quality of life (QoL), globally and in its different dimensions, may be affected by stopping or initiating volunteering, and which psychosocial mechanisms might be at work in such associations. This study used an explicative sequential mixed method design: analyses of 2011 and 2016 data from participants to the Lausanne cohort 65+ (n = 1,976, age 68-77 years in 2011) were followed by qualitative analyses of focus groups made of volunteers participating in the same cohort. Quantitative and qualitative results were then integrated to search for explanations of the former by the latter. Stopping (versus maintaining) volunt...
The year 2011 was declared the ‘European Year of Volunteering’ to recognise the contribution volunte...
A mixed methodology was used through the triangulation of quantitative and qualitative data to deter...
As people get older they often find volunteering a good substitute to lost social roles, such as wor...
The activity theory posits that productive activities are beneficial to older people's well-being. T...
The year 2011 was declared the ‘European Year of Volunteering’ to recognise the contribution volunte...
Previous scholarship has shown evidence of a positive relationship between volunteering and improved...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
It has been suggested that volunteering leads to increases in well-being, particularly in older and ...
Objectives Research has extensively documented the concurrent benefits of being a volunteer (vs a no...
ObjectivesResearch has extensively documented the concurrent benefits of being a volunteer (vs a non...
Although there is a large body of evidence documenting the benefits of engagement in formal voluntee...
Volunteering has been identified as a potential mechanism for improving the psychosocial health of o...
Studies often fail to adequately test the causal relationship between volunteering and well-being. Y...
The year 2011 was declared the ‘European Year of Volunteering’ to recognise the contribution volunte...
A mixed methodology was used through the triangulation of quantitative and qualitative data to deter...
As people get older they often find volunteering a good substitute to lost social roles, such as wor...
The activity theory posits that productive activities are beneficial to older people's well-being. T...
The year 2011 was declared the ‘European Year of Volunteering’ to recognise the contribution volunte...
Previous scholarship has shown evidence of a positive relationship between volunteering and improved...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
A large body of quantitative evidence has demonstrated a connection between volunteering and improve...
It has been suggested that volunteering leads to increases in well-being, particularly in older and ...
Objectives Research has extensively documented the concurrent benefits of being a volunteer (vs a no...
ObjectivesResearch has extensively documented the concurrent benefits of being a volunteer (vs a non...
Although there is a large body of evidence documenting the benefits of engagement in formal voluntee...
Volunteering has been identified as a potential mechanism for improving the psychosocial health of o...
Studies often fail to adequately test the causal relationship between volunteering and well-being. Y...
The year 2011 was declared the ‘European Year of Volunteering’ to recognise the contribution volunte...
A mixed methodology was used through the triangulation of quantitative and qualitative data to deter...
As people get older they often find volunteering a good substitute to lost social roles, such as wor...