Mori Hiroki, Seino Satoshi, Yokoyama Yuri, Yamashita Mari, Nofuji Yu, Ueda Takuya, Kitamura Akihiko, Hattori Shinji, Yamada Minoru, Kondo Katsunori, Arai Hidenori, Uchida Hayato, Kobayashi Erika, Fujiwara Yoshinori
Research Team for Social Participation and Healthy Aging, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Tokyo, Japan.
Graduate School of Human Science and Environment, University of Hyogo, Himeji, Japan.
Geriatr Gerontol Int. 2025 Apr;25(4):598-605. doi: 10.1111/ggi.70029. Epub 2025 Mar 15.
This study examined the short-term effects of participation in Kayoi-no-ba - community gathering places for residents to contribute to care prevention with the support of volunteers in Japan - on frailty status during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, based on a 1-year longitudinal study of older adults.
Participants (n = 3899) were aged ≥65 years. At baseline, they were classified into four groups, based on their frequency of participation in Kayoi-no-ba before and after the COVID-19 pandemic: the nonparticipation group, the continued participation group, the interrupted participation group and the new participation group. Frailty status, assessed using the modified Kihon Checklist, was the dependent variable. A generalized linear mixed-effects model was used to compare frailty status changes after a 1-year follow up in the four groups.
The frailty prevalence at baseline was 30.8% in the nonparticipation group, and 37.2% in the participation group. The frailty prevalence in the participation group was significantly reduced at the 1-year follow up (-3.9 percentage points [95% CI -7.4, -0.5]), compared with that of the nonparticipation group. In subgroup analyses, the frailty prevalence was reduced at the 1-year follow up in the order of continued participation group (-4.5 percentage points [95% CI -8.9, -0.2]), new participation group (-4.0 percentage points [95% CI -12.9, 5.0]), and interrupted participation group (-2.4 percentage points [95% CI -9.1, 4.3]), compared with the nonparticipation group (P = 0.024 for trend).
Even during the COVID-19 pandemic, participation in Kayoi-no-ba was effective in preventing/reducing frailty. Thus, avoiding prolonged nonparticipation in Kayoi-no-ba might be important. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2025; 25: 598-605.
本研究基于一项针对老年人的为期1年的纵向研究,探讨了参与日本的 “かよいの場”(即居民在志愿者支持下为预防护理做出贡献的社区聚集场所)对2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间衰弱状况的短期影响。
参与者(n = 3899)年龄≥65岁。在基线时,根据他们在COVID-19大流行前后参与 “かよいの場” 的频率,将他们分为四组:不参与组、持续参与组、中断参与组和新参与组。使用改良的基準チェックリスト评估的衰弱状况是因变量。采用广义线性混合效应模型比较四组在1年随访后的衰弱状况变化。
基线时,不参与组的衰弱患病率为30.8%,参与组为37.2%。与不参与组相比,参与组在1年随访时的衰弱患病率显著降低(-3.9个百分点 [95% CI -7.4, -0.5])。在亚组分析中,与不参与组相比,持续参与组(-4.5个百分点 [95% CI -8.9, -0.2])、新参与组(-4.0个百分点 [95% CI -12.9, 5.0])和中断参与组(-2.4个百分点 [95% CI -9.1, 4.3])在1年随访时的衰弱患病率按顺序降低(趋势P = 0.024)。
即使在COVID-19大流行期间,参与 “かよいの場” 对预防/减少衰弱也有效。因此,避免长期不参与 “かよいの場” 可能很重要。《老年医学与老年学国际杂志》2025年;25: 598 - 605。