Department of Health Services (LS, AP, CM, PBA, ET, MM), Health Promotion Research Center (HPRC), University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA.
Department of Health Services (LS, AP, CM, PBA, ET, MM), Health Promotion Research Center (HPRC), University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021 Aug;29(8):828-842. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.10.005. Epub 2020 Oct 16.
To evaluate PEARLS effectiveness for increasing social connectedness among underserved older adults with depression.
Multisite, pre-post single-group evaluation.
Community-based social service organizations (N = 16) in five U.S. states, purposively sampled for maximum variation of participants and providers.
A total of 320 homebound older adults (mean(SD) age 72.9(9.6), 79% female, 44% people of color, 81% low-income, 61% living alone, average four chronic conditions) with clinically significant depression (PHQ-9 mean(SD) 12.7(4.6)).
Four to 6 month home-based depression care management model delivered by trained front-line providers.
Brief validated social connectedness scales: Duke Social Support Index 10-item (DSSI-10), PROMIS-Social Isolation (6-item), UCLA-Loneliness (3-item); sociodemographic and health measures.
At baseline, PEARLS participants overall and with ≥1 of the following characteristics were less socially connected: younger (50-64), white, LGBTQ+, not partnered, not caregiving, living alone, financial limitations, chronic conditions, and/or recently hospitalized. Six-months post-PEARLS enrollment, participants significantly increased social interactions and satisfaction with social support (DSSI-10 t[312] = 5.2, p <0.001); and reduced perceived isolation (PROMIS t[310] = 6.3, p <0.001); and loneliness (UCLA t[301] = 3.7, p =0.002), with small to moderate effect sizes (Cohen's d DSSI-10: 0.28, PROMIS-SI: 0.35, UCLA: 0.21). Increased social connectedness was associated with reduced depression. Improvements in social connectedness (except social interactions) persisted during early COVID-19. Being Latino and/or having difficulty paying for basic needs was associated with less improvement in post-PEARLS social connectedness.
PEARLS has potential to improve social connectedness among underserved older adults, though additional supports may be needed for persons facing multiple social determinants of health. Further research is needed to establish causality.
评估 PEARLS 在增加服务不足的老年抑郁症患者社交联系方面的效果。
多地点、前后单组评估。
美国五个州的社区社会服务组织(N=16),参与者和提供者均进行了最大变异的有目的抽样。
共有 320 名居家的老年患者(平均年龄(标准差)72.9(9.6),79%为女性,44%为有色人种,81%为低收入者,61%独居,平均有四种慢性疾病),患有临床显著的抑郁症(PHQ-9 平均(标准差)12.7(4.6))。
由经过培训的一线服务提供者提供四到六个月的基于家庭的抑郁护理管理模式。
简短的经过验证的社交联系量表:杜克社会支持指数 10 项(DSSI-10)、PROMIS-社会隔离(6 项)、加州大学洛杉矶分校孤独量表(3 项);社会人口学和健康指标。
在基线时,PEARLS 参与者整体以及具有以下特征之一的参与者社交联系较少:年龄在 50-64 岁之间、白人、LGBTQ+、未婚、不照顾他人、独居、经济受限、患有慢性疾病、最近住院。在 PEARLS 登记后的六个月,参与者的社交互动和对社会支持的满意度显著增加(DSSI-10 t[312]=5.2,p<0.001);感知隔离程度降低(PROMIS t[310]=6.3,p<0.001);孤独感(UCLA t[301]=3.7,p=0.002),具有较小到中等的效应大小(Cohen's d DSSI-10:0.28,PROMIS-SI:0.35,UCLA:0.21)。社交联系的增加与抑郁的减少有关。社交联系的改善(社交互动除外)在早期 COVID-19 期间持续存在。拉丁裔和/或难以支付基本生活费用的人与 PEARLS 后社交联系改善较少有关。
PEARLS 有可能改善服务不足的老年患者的社交联系,但可能需要为面临多种健康社会决定因素的人提供额外的支持。需要进一步研究以确定因果关系。