Technology Use by Older Adults Open access Peer reviewed

ICT use and well-being in the oldest-old: Evidence from the representative German D80+ study

Anna Schlomann, Alexander Seifert, Christian Rietz

Educational Gerontology | Jun 10, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

While prior research has suggested that Information and communication technologies (ICT) use may be associated with enhanced well-being in older adults, evidence for the oldest-old population (aged 80+) remains limited. This study investigates the relationship between ICT use and subjective well-being in adults aged 80 and older using data from the representative German D80+ survey (n = 2,174). Building on earlier findings from a regional survey, we aim to replicate previous results and extend them by including an additional indicator of subjective well-being (i.e., positive affect). ICT use was categorized into internet-based use, non -internet-based use, and no ICT use. Moreover, descriptive analyses were used to explore different purposes of internet use (social vs. instrumental) to generate hypotheses for future research. Multiple linear regressions, including relative weights analyses, were conducted, controlling for sociodemographic variables, subjective health, and indicators of social inclusion. The study’s results indicate that internet-based ICT use is significantly associated with higher positive affect and lower anomie even after accounting for covariates. No significant association was found between ICT use by the oldest-old population and loneliness. These findings suggest that internet-based ICT may serve as a meaningful tool to support the oldest-old’s well-being.

Direct answer

What can I do from this paper page?

Use this page to scan "ICT use and well-being in the oldest-old: Evidence from the representative German D80+ study" quickly: start with the summary and abstract, then check the authors, source, topics, and related papers. From here, open Scollr to follow Technology Use by Older Adults research, save the paper, or map adjacent work.

Authors

Researchers on this paper

Anna Schlomann

first | Heidelberg University | ORCID 0000-0003-0174-3490

Alexander Seifert

middle | FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland | ORCID 0000-0003-3124-4588

Christian Rietz

last | Heidelberg University | ORCID 0000-0002-7057-4937

Research areas

Follow related topics

Citation

BibTeX

@article{Schlomann2026well,
  title = {ICT use and well-being in the oldest-old: Evidence from the representative German D80+ study},
  author = {Anna Schlomann and Alexander Seifert and Christian Rietz},
  journal = {Educational Gerontology},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1080/03601277.2026.2682506},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/03601277.2026.2682506}
}

FAQ

Using this paper in a discovery workflow

How do I find related work for this paper?

Use the related papers and topic links on this page as starting points. In Scollr, you can also open the paper and build a literature map around its references, citing papers, and related work.

How can I keep up with new Technology Use by Older Adults research papers?

Follow Technology Use by Older Adults research in Scollr. New papers from the topic flow into a personalized feed, and you can save useful studies to revisit later.

Can I cite this paper from this page?

This page includes a static BibTeX block for ICT use and well-being in the oldest-old: Evidence from the representative German D80+ study. Always verify the DOI, source, and publication details against the publisher record before submitting a manuscript.

Follow this research in Scollr

Follow the topics and authors behind this paper, save useful studies, and build a literature map when you are ready to go deeper.

Get the app