Loneliness and Its Association with Depression, Aspiration Risk, and Conversation in Japanese Older Adults
Naoki Maki, Hitomi Matsuda, Sachie Eto, Akihiro Araki, Toshifumi Takao, Thomas Mayers

TL;DR
This study explores how loneliness affects mental health and physical risks in older Japanese adults, finding links to depression and aspiration risk, and identifying social conversation and volunteering as protective factors.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the relationship between loneliness and health outcomes in Japanese older adults using a large-scale survey.
Findings
High loneliness was significantly associated with depressive symptoms (OR = 4.69).
Loneliness was linked to higher aspiration risk (OR = 1.08).
Volunteering was found to be a protective factor against loneliness (OR = 0.475).
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Loneliness is a critical public health concern associated with adverse mental and physical health outcomes in later life. However, few large-scale studies have examined loneliness in relation to depression, aspiration risk, frailty, and social participation among Japanese older adults. This study examined associations between loneliness and psychosocial and health-related factors among older adults. Methods: This cross-sectional study involved a secondary analysis of data obtained from online surveys conducted in 2018 and 2021 among 1000 community-dwelling Japanese adults (≥65 years). Loneliness was assessed using the UCLA Loneliness Scale Version 3 and dichotomized at the median to define a high-loneliness group. Depressive symptoms, aspiration risk, frailty, conversation frequency, and volunteering participation were assessed using validated scales.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Dental Health and Care Utilization · Nutrition and Health in Aging
