Loneliness, Social Support, & Perceived Economic Hardship in Self-Management of Older Liver Transplant Recipients
JiYeon Choi, JaeWon Hyun, Bomgyeol Kim, Hun Kang, Jin-kyung Lee

TL;DR
This study explores how loneliness, social support, and economic hardship affect self-management in older liver transplant recipients.
Contribution
The study identifies psychosocial factors and their mediation/moderation effects on self-management in aging liver transplant recipients.
Findings
Loneliness is linked to lower perceived social support in older liver transplant recipients.
Higher social support is associated with better self-management, regardless of economic hardship.
Economic hardship may reduce the protective effect of social support on self-management.
Abstract
Liver transplantation is a highly selective and resource-intensive procedure that challenges both individuals and health systems. With more older adults receiving liver transplantation to treat end-stage liver disease, it is important to recognize that outcomes are shaped not only by aging-related physical and cognitive challenges but also by psychosocial factors, including loneliness, social support, and perceived economic hardship. We examined relationships among loneliness, perceived social support, perceived economic hardship, and self-management in older liver transplant recipients (LTRs) (age≥60), focusing on the mediating role of perceived social support and the moderating role of perceived economic hardship. A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from 131 LTRs (Age 65.24±3.91 years, 55.8% men, 27.78±17.00 months post-transplant) recruited from a tertiary academic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Chronic Disease Management Strategies · Health and Well-being Studies
