Depression and social frailty in elderly patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis: multiple mediating roles of bidirectional social support and personal mastery
Neng Wang, Guoqing Wang, Xuefen Wang, Dejiao He

TL;DR
This study explores how social support and personal mastery affect the link between depression and social frailty in elderly patients on hemodialysis.
Contribution
The study identifies bidirectional social support and personal mastery as partial mediators between depression and social frailty in elderly hemodialysis patients.
Findings
Depression is strongly linked to social frailty in elderly hemodialysis patients.
Bidirectional social support and personal mastery partially mediate the depression-social frailty relationship.
Enhancing these psychosocial factors may reduce social frailty risk in this population.
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the multiple mediating roles of bidirectional social support and sense of personal mastery in the relationship between depression and social frailty among elderly patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis (MHD). A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 248 elderly MHD patients from two tertiary hospitals in Wuhan, China. Data were collected using a general information questionnaire, the Social Vulnerability Index, the Geriatric Depression Scale-5 (GDS-5), the Brief Two-Way Social Support Scale, and the Personal Mastery Scale. Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) was performed using AMOS 28.0. The mean scores were as follows: depression (1.91 ± 1.67), bidirectional social support (38.49 ± 8.43), personal mastery(21.51 ± 4.95), and SVI (0.49 ± 0.19). Depression was positively correlated with social frailty (r = 0.716, p < 0.01), whereas both personal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Health and Wellbeing Research · Workplace Health and Well-being
