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Dive into the research topics where Manon Marquet is active.

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Featured researches published by Manon Marquet.


Psychologica Belgica | 2016

A Validation of the French Version of the Attitudes to Aging Questionnaire (AAQ): Factor Structure, Reliability and Validity

Manon Marquet; Pierre Missotten; Sarah Schroyen; Iris van Sambeek; Marjan van den Akker; Carine Van Den Broeke; Frank Buntinx; Stéphane Adam

Introduction: The Attitudes to Aging Questionnaire (AAQ) was developed to measure attitudes toward the aging process as a personal experience from the perspective of older people. The present study aimed to validate the French version of the AAQ. Participants and methods: This study examined factor structure, acceptability, reliability and validity of the AAQ’s French version in 238 Belgian adults aged 60 years or older. In addition, participants provided information on demographics, self-perception of their mental and physical health (single items), quality of life (WHOQOL-OLD) and social desirability (DS-36). Results: Exploratory Factor Analysis produced a three-factor solution accounting for 36.9% of the variance. No floor or ceiling effects were found. The internal consistency, measured by Cronbach’s alpha coefficients for the AAQ subscales were 0.62 (Physical Change), 0.74 (Psychological Growth), and 0.75 (Psychosocial Loss). A priori expected associations were found between AAQ subscales, self-reported health and quality of life, indicating good convergent validity. The scale also showed a good ability to discriminate between people with lower and higher education levels, supporting adequate known-groups validity. Finally, we confirmed the need to control for social desirability biases when assessing self-reported attitudes toward one’s own aging. Conclusion: The data support the usefulness of the French version of the AAQ for the assessment of attitudes toward their own aging in older people.


Clinical Interventions in Aging | 2016

Ageism in Belgium and Burundi: A comparative analysis

Manon Marquet; Pierre Missotten; Sarah Schroyen; Desiderate Nindaba; Stéphane Adam

Background Recent cross-cultural comparisons between Asian and Western cultures have shown that ageism arises more from the lack of availability of social and economic resources for older adults than from the culture itself. We tested this assumption by conducting a survey among people living in a least developed country compared with those living in a developed country. Participants and methods Twenty-seven Belgians living in Belgium, 29 Burundians living in Belgium, and 32 Burundians living in Burundi were included in this study. Their attitudes toward older adults were assessed using several self-reported measures. Results Statistical analyses confirmed that older people are more negatively perceived by Burundians living in Burundi than by Burundians and Belgians living in Belgium, whose attitudes did not differ from each other. Conclusion Consistent with our hypothesis, our results suggest that the level of development of a country and more particularly the lack of government spending on older people (pension and health care systems) may contribute to their younger counterparts perceiving them more negatively.


Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2017

Interactions between stereotype threat, subjective aging, and memory in older adults

Manon Marquet; Pierre Missotten; Benoît Dardenne; Stéphane Adam

ABSTRACT This study examined whether the effects of stereotype threat on memory and subjective age were moderated by positive age stereotypes and self-perceptions of aging among older adults. Perceived threat as a mechanism underlying these effects was also explored. Results showed that stereotype threat (high vs. low threat) did not affect the dependent variables. Moreover, self-perceptions of aging did not moderate the effect of stereotype threat on the dependent variables. However, for people with more positive age stereotypes, older people under highthreat perceived more threat than people under low threat. This could be explained by an effect of age stereotypes in the high-threat group: the more positive age stereotypes held by participants, the more they perceived threat, which in turn decreased their memory performance and made them feel mentally older. We hypothesized that age group identity is stronger in people with more positive age stereotypes, which increase perceived threat.


Journal of Geriatric Oncology | 2017

The link between self-perceptions of aging, cancer view and physical and mental health of older people with cancer: A cross-sectional study

Sarah Schroyen; Manon Marquet; Guy Jerusalem; Benoît Dardenne; Marjan van den Akker; Frank Buntinx; Stéphane Adam; Pierre Missotten

OBJECTIVES Older people may suffer from stigmas linked to cancer and aging. Although some studies suggested that a negative view of cancer may increase the level of depression, such an association has never been studied in the elderly population. Similarly, even though it is established that a negative self-perception of aging has deleterious consequences on mental and physical health in normal aging, the influence in pathological contexts, such as oncology, has not been studied. The main aim of this study is thus to analyze the effect of these two stigmas on the health of elderly oncology patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS 101 patients suffering from a cancer (breast, gynecological, lung or hematological) were seen as soon as possible after their diagnosis. Their self-perception of age, cancer view and health (physical and mental) was assessed. RESULTS Multiple regressions showed that patients with a more negative self-perception of aging and/or more negative cancer view reported poorer global health. We also observed that negative self-perception of aging was associated with worse physical and mental health, whereas negative cancer views were only linked to worse mental health. No interaction was observed between these two stigmas, suggesting that their action is independent. CONCLUSION Older patients with cancer face double stigmatization, due to negative self-perception of aging and cancer, and these stigmas have impacts on global and mental health. Self-perception of aging is also linked to physical health. Longitudinal studies will be necessary to analyze the direction of the association between this double stigmatization and health.


Gériatrie et Psychologie Neuropsychiatrie du Vieillissement | 2016

Âgisme et surestimation des difficultés cognitives des personnes âgées : une revue de la question

Manon Marquet; Pierre Missotten; Stéphane Adam


NPG Neurologie - Psychiatrie - Gériatrie | 2017

Vieillir en bonne santé dans une société âgiste

Stéphane Adam; Pierre Missotten; Allison Flamion; Manon Marquet; Audrey Clesse; Sébastien Piccard; Coline Crutzen; Sarah Schroyen


Archive | 2016

Influence des stéréotypes dans l'évaluation neuropsychologique

Manon Marquet; Stéphane Adam


Archive | 2018

Présentation du premier village Alzheimer français à Dax : axes de recherches

Manon Marquet


European Journal of Cancer Care | 2018

Communication of healthcare professionals: Is there ageism?

Sarah Schroyen; Stéphane Adam; Manon Marquet; Guy Jerusalem; Stéphanie Thiel; Anne-Laure Giraudet; Pierre Missotten


Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2018

Does negative information about aging influence older adults’ physical performance and subjective age?

Manon Marquet; Mohamed Boutaayamou; Cédric Schwartz; Médéa Locquet; Olivier Bruyère; Jean-Louis Croisier; Stéphane Adam

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