# Mediating Role of Nutrition in Psychological, Social and Physical Frailty among Hospitalized Older Adults in China

**Authors:** Jing Ge, Ping He, Bei Cheng, Wenhan Li, Aihong Liu, Tangmeng Guo, Kemeng Zhang, Yi Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2869 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how nutrition connects physical, psychological, and social frailty in hospitalized older adults in China, suggesting that improving nutrition could help reduce overall frailty.

## Contribution

The study identifies nutrition as a key mediator linking psychological and social frailty to physical frailty in elderly hospitalized patients.

## Key findings

- Nutritional status mediates the relationship between psychological frailty and physical frailty.
- Nutritional status also mediates the relationship between social frailty and physical frailty.
- Psychological and social frailty are positively correlated with physical frailty in elderly inpatients.

## Abstract

To investigate the association between physical, psychological, and social frailty, and to explore the mediating factors that affect frailty in elderly inpatients, while providing scientific evidence for frailty intervention.

A cross-sectional study enrolled 134 hospitalized older patients with geriatric diseases. Based on the Fried frailty criteria, patients were categorized into physically frail and non-physically frail groups. Psychological frailty was assessed using the MMSE and GDS-15, while social frailty was evaluated with the WHOQOL-BREF and PSSS. Spearman’s correlation analyzed the relationship between the demographic variables and frailty. Mediation analyses elucidated relationships between frailty dimensions and their underlying mediators.

Age, self-care ability, risk of malnutrition, and comorbidity were significantly related with physical frailty. Meanwhile, psychological frailty (Cognitive impairment and depression) and social frailty (social support and quality of life) were positively correlated to physical frailty status. In addition, mediation analyses indicated that nutritional status mediated the relationship between psychological and physical frailty (MMSE: B = -0.0671, p < 0.0000; GDS-15: B = 0.0752, p < 0.0001), and between social and physical frailty (WHOQOL-BREF: B = -0.0229, p < 0.0000; PSSS: B = -0.0165, p < 0.0001).

Physical frailty in elderly inpatients is associated with psychological and social frailty, with nutritional status mediating these relationships. Therefore, it is essential to conduct comprehensive assessments for the multidimensional aspects of frailty present in these patients, targeted interventions addressing malnutrition could disrupt the vicious cycle of multidimensional frailty.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761139