Effects of volunteering over six months on loneliness, social and mental health outcomes among older adults: The HEAL-HOA Dual Randomized Controlled Trial.
In: American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, Jg. 32 (2024-05-01), Heft 5, S. 598-610
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Zugriff:
• What is the primary question addressed by this study? Did volunteering to deliver psychosocial interventions to older, low-income, and lonely age peers reduce loneliness among community dwelling lonely older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic? • What is the main finding of this study? Volunteering has a beneficial effect on volunteers' loneliness, stress, depressive symptoms, and social network engagement. • What is the meaning of the finding? A program that engages lonely older adults in psychosocial intervention delivery for other lonely older intervention recipients has beneficial effects on the lonely volunteers themselves and has potential to be a viable solution for the professional geriatric mental health workforce shortages even during crises like a global pandemic. To determine the beneficial effects of volunteering as lay counselor via telephone on own loneliness, social network engagement, perceived social support, stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms among Chinese older adults in Hong Kong during the COVID-19 pandemic. "Helping Alleviate Loneliness in Hong Kong Older Adults" (HEAL-HOA), a dual randomized controlled trial, was implemented to test effects of telephone-based psychosocial interventions delivered by older-adult volunteers for low-income lonely older adults. To evaluate the effects of volunteering on loneliness, we randomized 375 individuals ages 50–70 into a volunteering condition versus an active control (psychoeducation with social gatherings). Following a 6-week training, participants in the volunteering condition, delivered tele-interventions to older intervention recipients. The primary outcome was loneliness measured with the UCLA Loneliness Scale. Secondary outcomes were loneliness measured with the De Jong Gierveld Scale (DJG), social network engagement, perceived social support, perceived stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms. Assessments were completed before training (baseline) and immediately after the 6-month volunteering period. Results from linear mixed models show significant positive effects of volunteering (significant interactions of condition × time) on both measures of loneliness (d ppc2 = -0.41 ULCA Loneliness score, d ppc2 = -0.70 total DJG score), social network engagement, stress and depressive symptoms as compared to control participants. The HEAL-HOA trial demonstrates beneficial effects of volunteer-delivered tele-interventions on decreasing loneliness on the volunteer interventionists themselves. Communicating these benefits for volunteers may attract more older adults into volunteering. This effective tele-based volunteer program is scalable for wider implementation. This RCT tested effects of volunteering on loneliness in Hong Kong during the COVID-19-pandemic. Three hundred seventy-five individuals ages 50–70 were randomized into volunteering (delivering tele-interventions against loneliness) versus an active control condition. After 6 months, volunteers compared to controls, showed benefits on loneliness, social network engagement, stress and depressive symptoms. A program engaging lonely older adults in loneliness intervention delivery has beneficial effects on volunteers themselves and could be a scalable solution for our loneliness epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Titel: |
Effects of volunteering over six months on loneliness, social and mental health outcomes among older adults: The HEAL-HOA Dual Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Warner, Lisa M. ; Yeung, Dannii Yuen-lan ; Jiang, Da ; Choi, Namkee G. ; Ho, Rainbow Tin Hung ; Kwok, Jojo Yan Yan ; Chou, Kee-Lee |
Zeitschrift: | American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, Jg. 32 (2024-05-01), Heft 5, S. 598-610 |
Veröffentlichung: | 2024 |
Medientyp: | academicJournal |
ISSN: | 1064-7481 (print) |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jagp.2023.12.022 |
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